The completion of the new church was a tribute to the faith and courage of the vestry and people of St. Paul's. The lumber industry, on which Muskegon had depended, was practically gone by 1890. Nevertheless, the building was completed and the first service was held on June 6, 1893, in connection with the Diocesan Convention which met in Muskegon on June 6, 7 and 8.
Bishop Gillespie dedicated and blessed the church, noting that his first consecration of a church had been the first St. Paul's church on April 4, 1875. The church was consecrated on September 11, 1898 after Mr. Thomas Hume paid the balance of St. Paul's construction debt.
A notable enrichment of the sanctuary came in 1905 when Mrs. Erie L (Hackley) Smith gave as a thank offering an altar of Italian Carrara white marble. It was consecrated on January 28, 1906. Later in 1920, Mrs Smith gave the mosaic tile work above the altar, the canopy, reredos, chancel window and communion rail.
Newly constructed St. Paul's Episcopal Church on the corner of Clay Ave. and Third St. Photo. 1893.
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The beautiful memorial windows in the south transept were placed in May, 1906. They were made in England and were given by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hume. In 1921, Mrs. Hume and family replaced the windows in the north transept with those which supplement the ones in the south transept.
Electric lights replaced gas in the chancel in 1906. The property adjoining the church on Clay Avenue was purchased in January, 1922, to provide for expansion. The church interior was completely redecorated in 1924.
The vestry, in April, 1928, was authorized to contract for a new organ, to buy a rectory and to convert the old rectory to a church school and general parish work space. Soon arrangements were made for the organ, a new pulpit, lectern, litany desk, chancel rail and choir stalls. The dedication service for the new organ, chancel woodwork, pulpit and lectern took place on January 25, 1929. Mr Paul Eickmeyer, organist, gave a recital on the following Sunday to show the power of the Austin organ, then the largest in the Diocese and still in use today.
In July 1946 a committee was appointed to outline a plan for a new Parish House containing the church school, church offices and a chapel. As the study progressed, the committee became convinced that some rehabilitation and revision of the old rectory should be considered instead of building on the vacant Clay Avenue property. On May 23, 1950, a special meeting of the parish authorized the vestry to demolish the rectory, to erect a suitable new building and to remodel existing buildings. Resurrection chapel was completed and consecrated in 1954. The chapel seats fifty and is used mainly for midweek communion, small weddings and private prayer. The church school is in active use to this day and was recently refurbished by volunteers from our congregation in 2006.
"So ends our first hundred years. St. Paul's had seen many vicissitudes: material ones ranging from a furnace which smoked so badly that the congregation was often in tears, no matter how cheerful the sermon, to the perennial need for money, necessitating mortgages on the property and borrowings from the banks; spiritual discouragements from the lack of a rector at times and apathy of parishioners. Always a devoted band of churchmen and churchwomen had the faith and courage to carry on and to win through to success. May such not be found wanting in the next hundred years." [1. Written in 1966, St. Paul's Centennnial Celebration.]