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One
of seven that depict the events in Christ's life on stained glass windows in the church,
this window shows "Christ teaching the little children" and is located in the
children's chapel on the ground floor. The children's chapel is part of the 1958 parish
house addition to Christ Church. Ordered in October 1957, the window
was created by Jacoby Art Glass Company of St. Louis, Missouri, in 1958.
It is 42" wide and 62" high. It was
given to Christ Church as a Memorial by Mrs. J.M. McCue and family and is inscribed as
follows:
"To the Glory of
God and in loving Memory of John Moffet McCue, 1890-1956"
The
fourteen original stained glass windows in the nave at Christ Episcopal Church
were installed when the present church was built in 1920-1921 after a devastating
fire on Christmas day, 1919. The fire destroyed the
original wooden church that
had been completed on November 23, 1890. The new church was completed and
dedicated on October 23, 1921, by Episcopal Bishop W. L. Gravatt, with clergy
E. W. Hughes of Graham (now Bluefield, VA) and Rector Jennings Wise Hobson, who
served Christ Church for thirty-three years from 1916 until 1949, assisting.
The windows in the nave of
Christ Church are of the Munich style, or “Munich School.” These windows
were created by Jacoby Art Glass Company of St. Louis, Missouri, in 1920.
Jacoby later created the narthex (front hallway) windows and the window in our
children’s chapel in 1958.
Click here to learn more about
these windows, the "Munich"
style, and Jacoby Art Glass Company.
These windows are
unequalled in our area. They bathe the nave of the church in color and
illustrate the life of Christ to those venturing into this hallowed space. The
classic Gothic architectural style of Christ Episcopal Church symbolizes the
Anglican origins of the Episcopal Church in the USA.
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