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Saint Chrysostom

The Entrance Transom

The Stained Glass Window Access Page

Transom window over main entrance (This is the largest photograph of this window on our website)

Two pictorial windows in Christ Church depict saints. A third has been ordered and should be installed sometime in 2001.  Seven windows depict events in the life of Christ. There are also thirteen decorative stained glass windows in the church, including the one shown here. This window is found in the narthex, at the main entrance to the church on Duhring Street. Created by Jacoby Art Glass Company of St. Louis, Missouri, this transom was installed with the 1958 church parish house addition and IS 28" high and 63" wide.  Jacoby Art Glass Company also created the window in the children's chapel and the six windows on the Duhring Street side of the narthex.

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 nave 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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visits since 18 October 2000
This page was last updated December 25, 2009
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