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Divine Stone

The Crypt Among The Massive Granite Blocks

As the foundations of the cathedral started to come up, the outline of the Crypt began to take shape. The arches shown here are below grade and form spaces in the Crypt. The Crypt follows the Heins & Lafarge plan above it. Basically, it encompassed the space of the Choir, Chancel, Sanctuary, Apse and the seven Apsidal Chapels. In later years, artists-in-residence used studio spaces in the Crypt. The spaces below the Chapels carried their names. Gregg Wyatt, who created the Peace Fountain used one as his studio for years. Almost all of the space is now storage.

Setting arch in Crypt
Setting Arch in Crypt between Piers K & C

The Crypts’ vaulted ceiling was the Guastavino Company’s first job at the Cathedral. They installed a fireproof ceiling of Akoustilith tile of Guastavino’s design. The tile had significant absorptive qualities. Therefore the congregation could hear the readers and preachers. The construction of the “temporary” dome over the crossing will showcase more significant work by Guastavino.

Finally, on Sunday, January 8, 1899, the Crypt, accommodating a congregation of 500 persons, opened for services. Above it, the eight massive columns were still at the quarry. The keystone of the Great Eastern Arch was still ten years away. These services continued without interruption for the next 12 years. On the morning of April 19, 1911 the last service was held, with the opening of the Choir and the Crossing.

Interior of Crypt
Interior of Crypt showing foundation piers and arch, Jan. 9, 1899. – Photo New York Public Library

The Tiffany Chapel

The Tiffany Company designed and built an amazing chapel for the 1893 Worlds Fair in Chicago. As a result, it won numerous medals and was one of the most visited at the event. Mrs. Celia Hermoine Wallace purchased the chapel and gifted it to the Cathedral in memory of her son. It consisted of an altar, reredos, font, lecturn and five stained glass windows. Above all, the altar contained 150,000 squares of glass set in mosaic. The top of the altar and the retable were Carrara marble. The medallions in front were mother of pearl. The central shield contained settings of sapphires, topazes and pieces of pearl. The reredos was of iridescent glass mosaic.

Crypt Interior, Tiffany Chapel
Crypt Interior, Tiffany Chapel 1899. – Photo New York Public Library
Crypt Canterbury Cathedral

CRYPT – From the latin Crypta meaning any vaulted building partially or entirely below ground. As early as the Roman emperor Constantine the Great (306-337), the crypt was considered a normal part of a church building, usually for burials. Later the size of the crypt was increased to include the entire space under the floor of the church choir. Crypts were highly developed in England throughout the Romanesque and Gothic periods. At Canterbury (pictured) the crypt (dating from 1100) forms a large and complex church, with apse and chapels.

  • Photo – Museum of the City of New York
  • Photos – Irma and Paul Milstein Division of United States History, Local History and Genealogy, The New York Public Library. Manhattan: Amsterdam Avenue – Cathedral Parkway

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Cathedral Stone

Unique Flat Arch for Southwest Tower

The flat arch on the north elevation (roof side) of the southwest tower is in three pieces. It spans an opening of eight feet. The visible joints of the keystone are perpendicular thus giving a gravity defying impression, but in fact concealing arch joints. A brick relieving arch was built in the hearting above to discharge some of the load above away from the opening.

secret key joint for flat arch
secret key joint for flat arch
Joint description from Practical Masonry
Details from Practical Masonry, by William R. Purchase

“I remember us having quite a lot of difficulty with the installation as the pieces were quite large and unwieldly and difficult to position on the falsework. I think Jim Bambridge had long awaited a chance to use this type of arch.”

– Steve Boyle, Master Mason
Flat Arch drawing title block

The title block for the unique flat arch for the tower drawing above, rendered March 29, 1980, by J. R. Bambridge, Master Builder.

Photo - Steve Boyle

Stephen Boyle was raised in Yorkshire, England. He began working with stone at age 18 at the Yorkminster Cathedral stoneyard. After his three year apprenticeship he started on restoration work at Salisbury Cathedral. Both cathedrals dated from the 12th century. Salibury Cathedral is pure Gothic throughout. James Bambridge hired him to begin the setting of stone on the Southwest Tower in 1981.

  • Special thanks to Steve Boyle for all the information and images in this post.
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Divine Stone

Three New Arches

The Building Committee of the Cathedral announced its intention not only to complete the choir structure, but also to continue to the westward and construct the Crossing. The providing of necessary funds would accomplish the three new arches and cover for the crossing.

The pillars being in place, the next step will be the erection of three more arches. They will be precisely the same as the great eastern arch already erected. These four arches complete the square of the crossing. The Belmont Chapel is about complete and the Chapel of St. Columba has started. The Committee needs an additional $500,000 beyond funds on hand and other commitments. Regarding the Crossing area, The Building Committee of the Board of Trustees said the following:

It is estimated that $200,000 would complete the choir. If finished it would easily accommodate a comparatively small number of worshippers. It is in the judgement of the committee, highly desirable that, in addition to the great stone arch now standing, there should be three similar ones needed to enclose the ‘crossing.’ Were the ground thus bounded to be temporarily roofed over and walled in, we should have an interior capable of accommodating from four to five thousand worshippers.”

– The Building Committee

Completing the Arches

All of the piers and columns for the next three arches came up from bedrock in an orderly way. Granite blocks for these structures kept arriving at the site. The western arch was the first to complete.

Western Arch Progress
Western Arch Progress
Keystone for Western Arch
Keystone For Western Arch, August 10, 1908

The North Arch was the next to complete

North Arch Complete
North Arch Complete. October 1908
One of the three new arches. South Arch Lower Ring of Voussoirs
South Arch Voussoirs. Lower Ring Complete. November 1908
New South Arch Keystone Setting
Setting the South Arch Keystone. November 24, 1908

Voussoirs on the arches and buttresses

Keep in mind, when Heins & La Farge designed the arches, they were to support a massive lantern and tower. The lantern would fill the crossing with light from large windows. With that in mind, the arches would need to be quite massive. Arch construction depends essentially on a wedge. If a series of wedge-shaped blocks, ones in which the upper edge is wider than the lower edge, are set flank to flank, the result is an arch. Voussoir is the term for these blocks on both the arches and the buttresses.

Notice the staggered joints on the voussoirs that are side by side. A row of two voussoirs is flanked on each side by three voussoirs. This design further strengthens the arch.

Voussoir on Arch

Additionally there are three sets of these voussoirs front to back to further create these massive arches. Numbering the stone determines its exact location. Each voussoir must be precisely cut so that it presses firmly against the surface of neighboring blocks and conducts loads uniformly. The pressure downward on an arch has the effect of forcing the voussoirs together instead of apart. These stresses also tend to squeeze the blocks outward radially. Loads divert these outward forces downward to exert a diagonal force called thrust. These forces will cause the arch to collapse if it is not properly buttressed. Therefore the vertical supports upon which an arch rests must be massive enough to buttress the thrust and conduct it into the foundation.

Voussoir

The word is a stonemasonry term borrowed in Middle English from French verbs connoting a “turn”. Each wedge-shaped voussoir turns aside the thrust on to the supports. Voussoir arches distribute weight efficiently, and take maximum advantage of the compressive strength of stone.

  • Photo Credits – All photos from the Irma and Paul Milstein Division of the United States History, Local History and Genealogy, The New York Public Library. Manhattan: Amsterdam Avenue – Cathedral Parkway
Categories
Divine Stone

A Gablet for the Tower

Gablet for East Face of the Southwest Tower
March 20, 1986. Group around gablet. – Photo Robert F. Rodroguez

The group above all participated in the creation of this beautiful gablet destined for the east face of the southwest tower. They are Nick Fairplay – top, to the right Joseph Kincannon, Jose Tapia, D’Ellis Kincannon. Bottom row R-L Frank Walcott, Ruben Gibson, Angel Escobar, James Jamerson, Alan Bird, and Al Rivera. Left side top Eddie Pizarro, then Cynthia Linton. Some were on the saws and planers, some were cutters and some were carvers. Frank Walcott was the business manager.

This gablet or gable for the tower consists of some 25 different stones, cut and carved in the stoneyard. It is built into a wall of the tower as shown here as opposed to the south and west faces of the new tower where the gablets sit above balconies. There are two of these on each side with the exception of the side facing the roof (north). Shown below, being worked on in the carving shed, are three pieces of the gablet.

“We assembled this gable (or gablet, some would say) on the ground to show the public what it was we were working on. From the street level, all people could see were stacks of stone. We also assembled this to help raise money. There was a need to display not only apprentices at work, but a finished product.”

– Joseph Kincannon
Stoneyard Scrapbook, Stacks of stone
Stacks of stone – Photo Robert F. Rodriguez
  • Special thanks to Joseph Kincannon for this information