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Historic Photo from NRHP Filing
METROPOLITAN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 60 Chandler Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan PHOTOGRAPHER: Charles C. Cotman DATE: September, 1980 NEGATIVE: Michigan History Division Michigan Dept. of State Lansing, Michigan VIEW: Camera facing ESE PHOTO: No. 22 of 53
Metropolitan United Methodist Church originated with the merger of two smaller congregations: the Woodward Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church, organized in 1885, and the Oakland Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church, organized ten years later. The merged congregations dedicated their first church on April 27, 1902 at a site on Woodward Methodist Episcopal Church (because it was located at the then-extreme northern part of the city). On December 24, 1916 fire destroyed the church auditorium. This disaster spurred the congregation to build a new edifice. On June 4, 1923 a cornerstone was laid, and the congregation renamed Metropolitan Methodist, due to the continued expansion of the city of Detroit many miles north of the chosen location. William E. N. Hunter, a member of the congregation, planned the massive structure of Massachusetts granite and gray Ohio sandstone. The building was dedicated on January 17, 1926. The total cost of construction exceeded $1,500,000 and the structure is said to have been the first million-dollar-plus building in the history of American Methodism. Membership reached a peak of over 7,000 members by 1951. Today, well over 2,000 members still worship in this massive Collegiate Gothic structure. Metropolitan's architect, W. E. N. Hunter, is one of Michigan's most prolific and accomplished, early twentieth-century architects of Protestant churches, and Metropolitan is significant as his masterpiece.
The structure is located at the northeast corner of Woodward Avenue and Chandler Street in Detroit. The property is bounded on the north by Marston Street, on the south by Chandler Street, on the east by John R. Street, and on the west by Woodward Avenue and measures about 275 feet in length by 210 feet in width. Metropolitan United Methodist Church is a vast, Collegiate Gothic-style, ochre-colored, Massachusetts granite and gray-sandstone-trimmed structure built in 1922-26. The enormous, rambling complex covers an entire city block. It is composed of a cruciform, buttressed, cross-gable-roofed church with low side wings filling the space between the arms of the cross. A single, huge Gothic traceried window fills the gabled elevations at the ends of the arms. The church is connected to a large parish house and auditorium by a square, flat-roofed, entrance tower with a louvered belfry facing Chandler Street. Extending the width of the block from Chandler Street to Marston Street along the rear of the lot is the multi-gabled, 2-story parish house. The asymmetrical elevations are pierced by numerous banks of leaded casement windows arranged between turrets and buttresses. The interior is divided into numerous architecturally designed spaces decorated in the Tudor Gothic style. The entrance in the base of the Chandler Street tower leads into a long vaulted hall extending in several segments all the way through the structure to Marston Street. On the left of the entrance hall is the main church auditorium. This contains a square, full-height, tile-vaulted, central space with balconies and pew seating filling the three transepts bordering it. The focus of the hall is the shallow, curving, raised sanctuary bordered by a low, Gothic-style, carved marble wall. Behind the sanctuary and the carved marble choir screen, the choir seating rises in the transept that forms the fourth arm of the cruciform plan church. The church walls are finished in limestone, granite, and plaster, with a slate floor, ceramic tile vaulted ceiling with limestone ribbing, and oak pews and balcony railing. Metal chandeliers supplement the light provided by the large stained glass windows in the transepts.
William E. N. Hunter
NRHP Ref# 82002904 • Data from National Park Service • Content available under CC BY-SA 4.0
METROPOLITAN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 60 Chandler Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan PHOTOGRAPHER: Charles C. Cotman DATE: September, 1980 NEGATIVE: Michigan History Division Michigan Dept. of State Lansing, Michigan VIEW: Camera facing ESE PHOTO: No. 22 of 53
Public Domain (Michigan Filing)
The Metropolitan United Methodist Church is a church located at 8000 Woodward Avenue (at Chandler) in the New Center area of Detroit, Michigan. It was completed in 1926, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, and designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1986. This church should not be confused with Metropolitan United Methodist Church in Washington, DC, which is often regarded as a National Church within the United States as it was specifically established by the General Conference to be a "representative presence of Methodism in the nation's capital".In 1901, two Detroit Methodist congregations, the Woodward Avenue Methodist Episcopal (founded in 1885) and the Oakland Avenue Church (founded in 1886), merged to form the North Woodward Avenue Methodist Church. Two years later, Dr. Charles Bronson Allen became pastor and convinced the congregation to construct a building at Woodward and Melbourne which burned down on Christmas Eve 1916. The congregation decided to rebuild grander than ever. One of the congregants, Sebastian S. Kresge (who lived nearby in Boston-Edison), donated land at Woodward and Chandler for a new building as well as offering substantial financial support. Another congregant, William E. N. Hunter, designed the structure, however, shortages of building materials and labor caused by World War I delayed construction. The cornerstone was finally laid June 4, 1922, and the first services were held in the completed sanctuary January 17, 1926. By the mid-1930s, the congregation was the largest local church in the Methodist world. Church membership peaked in 1943 at 7,300 members.The church is a very large structure in the English Gothic style, built from a distinctive ochre granite from Massachusetts. It is built in a traditional cruciform design buttressed with several low side wings and a gabled roof. The sanctuary occupies the western half of the building while the eastern half contains an auditorium, offices and classrooms. A hallway on the main level separates the sanctuary from the auditorium. The walls of both spaces retract allowing up seating for up to 7,000 with a view of the chancel.One curious feature, when viewing the building from the exterior, is that the lower half of the chancel window is filled with stone rather than glass. This is to allow for display of a large tapestry on the church's interior.The church is painted throughout by the artist George Boget. Three murals on the second floor crush hall depict scenes from the history of Protestantism and Methodism. They are entitled "The Dawn of Reformation," "John Wesley Preaching on His Father's Tomb," and "Francis Asbury, Apostle of the Long Trail." A winding tree motif ties these murals together with smaller symbolic imagery painted into the vaulted ceilings on the first and second floor corridors, as well as large murals in Kresge Hall, the auditorium. These murals show smaller scenes of Methodist and Metropolitan History tied into the "family tree" that binds the congregation together.[citation needed]In 1970, Stanley and Dorothy Kresge donated $194,000 for the Merton S. Rice Memorial Organ, named for the former pastor. They contributed an additional $10,000 for structural modifications to house the pipe chambers. The organ is opus 10641 of the M. P. Moller Organ Company. The organ incorporated some pipes from an earlier instrument by Austin Organs, Inc. and at installation, contained 6,849 pipes in 119 ranks. In subsequent years, it has been enlarged to 7,003 pipes and 121 ranks, making it the second largest pipe organ in the state of Michigan.• Hill, Eric J. and John Gallagher (2002). AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-3120-3.• Metropolitan United Methodist Church
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