St. Mary's Catholic Cathedral (Cheyenne, Wyoming)

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St. Mary's Catholic Cathedral
File:Cathedral of St. Mary, Cheyenne, WY, West view 20110823 2.jpg
St. Mary's Catholic Cathedral (Cheyenne, Wyoming) is located in Wyoming
St. Mary's Catholic Cathedral (Cheyenne, Wyoming)
Location 2107 Capitol Avenue
Cheyenne, Wyoming
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Built 1906-1909
Built by Moses Patrick Keefe
Architect Fisher and Lowery
Architectural style Gothic Revival
NRHP Reference # 74002026 [1]
Added to NRHP November 20, 1974

St. Mary's Cathedral is the cathedral and parish church in the Diocese of Cheyenne located in Cheyenne, Wyoming, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

Description

Reverend William Kelly founded the parish as St. John the Baptist in 1867 and erected a frame church. Ten years later, a brick structure replaced it. After Pope Leo XIII established the Diocese of Cheyenne in 1887 the church was rededicated to St. Mary.[2] The congregation outgrew the brick church and Bishop James J. Keane, third bishop of Cheyenne, started plans to build a new cathedral and bishop's residence.

In 1906, construction of Cheyenne's new Catholic cathedral began with Omaha's Fisher and Lowery as its architects.[3] Bishop Keane and Reverend James A. Duffy acquired the necessary funds and a site for construction and 5,000 people attended the laying of the cornerstone on Sunday, July 7, 1907.[2] Prominent Wyoming builder Moses Patrick Keefe was responsible for constructing the cathedral. The sandstone for the exterior was quarried at Iron Mountain, north of Cheyenne. On January 31, 1909, Bishop Maurice Burke of St. Joseph, Missouri, who had been the first bishop of Cheyenne consecrated the Cathedral was consecrated, and Bishop John Carroll of Helena, Montana who delivered the homily.

The 135 by 70 feet (41 by 21 m) cathedral is in the Gothic revival style and features two side galleries and a rear organ loft.[2] The ceiling is supported by steel and concrete arches faced with oak.

The total construction costs equaled $125,000, which and was debt-free when completed.[3] The stained glass windows are donated memorials which were crafted in Europe. The large Madonna window in the organ loft, a gift of the Knights of Columbus, was also imported from Europe however parish records do not contain information about the artists or installation dates. In 1962, the parish added a structure east of the cathedral to house meeting and activity rooms at a cost of $200,000.[2]

The Visser-Rowland Organ Company constructed its Opus 92 for the cathedral in 1991. The instrument features 38 stops and 53 ranks and was dedicated in March, 1992.[3][4]

See also

References

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External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons