HomeMy WebLinkAboutMethodistEpiscopalChurch . MONTANA HISTORICAL/ARCHITECTURAL INVENTORY #10
HISTORIC NAME: r Methodist Episcopal Church -
'ADDRESS: 121 S. Willsonr Bozeman
LEGAL BOUNDARY: Alderson's elk B, 5.3' of lot 7,
"all of lots 8► 91 10
OWNER'S NAME: Bozeman United Methodist Church t.
=OWNER ADDRESS: -119 S. Willson, Bozeman, MT
SPECIFIC DATE: 1873--1874
„ARCHITECT: Unknown
- r BUILDER: Unknown (tower: Uhlrich)
= ORIGINAL OWNER: Methodist Episcopal Church
- _ ORIGINAL USE: church
PRESENT USE: church
UTM REFERENCE: 12/497000/5058060 _
- ACREAGE: less than one
YU.S.G.S. QUAD: Bozeman, 1953
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE:
Applicable Criteria: A and C r
Areas of Significance: social history, architecture
_ - Number of Contributing Properties: 1 -
-_The Bozeman Methodist Episcopal Church is the oldest extant Methodist Church in Montana.
Despite some additions and alterations, the original 1873 Gothic Revival style design of
the building is still clearly evident. The building is also significant as one of the very
first large brick structures erected in the city, built during a brief period of prosperity
- - from 1872 and 1873. : -
- A.M. Hough of Virginia City formally organized the Methodist-Episcopal Church in Bozeman on
August 8, 1866. Previous to this time, Bozeman pioneer and newspaper editor W.W. Alderson
= had organized a Sunday school in a log house on Main Street in 1865, just one year after
- the town was founded. The first church, which was also the first frame building in town,
was a very simple 24 x 36 foot structure at the southwest corner of Main and Tracy, It was
built in 1866, and had only slab seats and a sawdust floor.. In 1869 a bell, the first in
town, was added.
By 1872, preparations for the present church, which was an especially notable structure in
this isolated frontier town, were underway. In that year, Walter Cooper and Colonel L.M.
Black built the very impressive Main Street commercial block of brick. That building, and
the Methodist Church are today the two most notable indications of the brief building boom
in Bozeman during the years 1872 and 1873. In response to the surge in construction, W.H.
Tracy began manufacturing bricks in the town, and was contracted to provide the brick for
this building, .
The church was completed in 1874 under the ministry of Reverend T.C. Iliff. It originally
had no tower, and pilasters marked each bay, terminated by Gothic finials. A free-
standing bell tower was located behind the church (see attached photograph) , and a
boardwalk linked the church with Main Street - then virtually the only street in town.
As construction of the church coincided with Bozeman's first building boom in 1872-1673,
the thorough remodeling of the church coincided with the next major period of growth in
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k: Methodist Episcopal Church (cont. )
:.Bozeman, which began just after the turn of the century. The Republican Courier of May 18,
= 4I906, announced: "The formal opening of the new church parlors of the First Methodist
Episcopal Church was held yesterday—the entire church was remodeled and with .its addition
is now ,practically completed and furnished throughout. " Additions included the Epworth
League room, which had 75 seats, and a new chapel of 250 seats, which would be connected to
the old main auditorium of 200 seats. The round, stained glass rose window in the gable
end was also added at this time.
The major feature added during this early 20th century remodeling was the present Lombard-
inspired bell tower. The brick tower was built in 1905 by the father Joseph A. Uhlrich - a
Bozeman resident today. The senior Uhlrich had learned the masonry trade from his father,
a Swiss immigrant trained in elaborate stone carving for large European cathedrals. The
date of construction of 1905 can be confirmed in part by the 1904 Sanborn map, which shows
no tower, and in part from family folklore. According to Uhlrich, when his father was high
up on the tower during its construction, his wife was giving birth. The news was hollered
up to the mason: "You've got a son!" ---,That son was Philip Uhlrich, Joseph Uhlrich's oldest
brother, who is still living today.
The final major alteration was the addition of stucco sheathing to the entire church
- exterior, and the addition of a brick entrance and brick trim ini1950.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION:The Methodist Episcopal Church has three, major component parts: the 1873 large, one-story
gable roof brick portion located at the corner of W. Olive and S. Willson Avenues, which is
the original part of the building; the 1905 three--story, square bell tower with pyramidal
roof topped with a decorative finial; and the 1905-1906, two-story, flat roofed addition.
The building is entered by way of two 10-panel double-door entrances on the east facade,
one to the original church and the other at the base of the bell tower. The latter
entrance is set within a brick architrave and has a tripartite window with wooden tracery
above. -The former is set within a small, gable roofed, brick entryway that protrudes from
the facade and was-likely constructed during the 1930's when the stucco covering was -
applied to the entire structure. The windows of the original church portion are stained
glass set in large, Gothic-arched openings with pilasters between. A stained glass rose
window is placed above the entrance. The bell tower windows are narrow one-over-one double
hung units set in tall, vertical openings. The windows of the north addition are also
stained glass, with the tipper floor windows having Gothic arches. The stained glass
windows all have plexiglass storms. The building sets on a stone and concrete foundation.
The main roof is covered with cedar shingles and the flat roofed addition is of built-up
materials. A brass plaque on the southeast corner reads "First Methodist Church, 1874, in
memory of Grace Clark, missionary to Africa."
Although the Methodist Episcopal Church was enlarged by the bell tower and northern
addition in 1905-1906, the original Gothic Revival design and construction of the original
portion is clearly evident. A one-story, flat roofed brick addition housing the church
offices was built onto the rear (west) of the original portion of the building, likely
during the 1950's remodeling. This 1950 's addition, the construction of the brick
entrances, and the application of a stucco covering to the entire brick building are all
alterations that serve to undermine the historic architectural integrity of the building,
but which are not changes that drastically alter the architectural quality of the church.
The Methodist-Episcopal Church qualifies for listing in the National Register, despite
these alterations, for its strong historical associations with the founding of the earliest
--Methodist Episcopal Church (cont.)
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social institutions in the- newly founded town of Bozeman.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: - -
Joseph H. Uhlrich, interview, Bozeman, MT, January, 1986
Sanborn Maps, 1904, 1912
Nieble, Esther C. (compiler) , A Century 4f Service--- History of thethe._First MeLbodist_ lurch.
Bozeman. MT. 1866-1966, published by the church, 1966.
Burlingame, 1976, p. 351
B== Quil - Chctnic1e, Centennial Edition, Part V, p. 3
FORM PREPARED BY: James R. McDonald, P.C. (1983-84) ; Matthew Cohen (1985-86 revision) ;
Patricia Bick (1987 revision) , State Historic Preservation Office, 225 No. Roberts, Helena,
Montana 59620 (406) 444-7715 -