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"Trinity Church (Episcopal) is located in Copley Square.
The building can be considered the finest church edifice in New England, if
not in the country. It is of pure French Romanesque style, in the shape of a
Latin cross, with a semi-circular apse [cavity] added to the eastern arm. The clear-story of Trinity Church is carried by an arcade [series of
columns] of only two arches. Above the aisles, a gallery is carried across the arches, which is called the
triforium gallery. This serves to connect the three main galleries,
one across either transept [intersection where cross meets], and one across the west end
of the nave [main area of the church]. The extreme width
across the transepts is 121 feet, and the extreme length 100 feet. The
chancel is 57 feet deep and 52 feet wide. A unique chapel connects
with the main structure by an open cloister [covered walkway], the effect of
which is very striking. The whole interior of the church is
finished in black walnut, and the vestibule in ash and oak. The
interior decorations are elaborate and in exquisite taste, and they form an
enduring monument to the skill of John La Farge of New York. A great
central tower, 211 feet high, surmounts the structure, rising from four
piers at the crossing of the nave and transept. It is massive in form,
and is the main feature of the edifice. The tower inside is 46 feet
square.
The material employed in the body of the church is Dedham granite,
ornamented with brownstone trimmings. The exterior of the apse is
decorated with mosaic work of polished granite. The church has several
stained glass memorial windows, made in Europe. It resembles some of
those cathedrals in the South of France which are recognized as models in a
noble school of ecclesiastical art. The architects were Messrs. [plural of Mr.] Gambrill of New York and H. H. Richardson of Boston. The church was
consecrated on February 9th 1877, the bishop of the diocese conducting
the services. Four prelates of the church, many clergymen, the
governor of the State, the mayor of the city, and a large number of other
people of distinction were present on the occasion.
The history of Trinity Church begins in 1728. In April of
that year, steps were taken towards the formation of a third Episcopal
church in Boston, 'by reason that the Chapel [King's Chapel] is full, and no
pews to be bought by new comers.' Land was purchased at the corner of
Summer Street and Bishop Alley (now Hawley Street), and it was arranged that
a church be built thereon, 'most conducing to the decent and regular
performance of divine service according to the rubric [rituals] of the
common Prayer book used by the Church of England, as by law established.'
The movement developed slowly; and it was 6 years before the cornerstone of
the proposed building was laid, though the church was organized under the
name of Trinity Church, and services begun elsewhere. On April 15th 1734,
sufficient subscriptions were then secured, and the cornerstone was laid by
Reverend Roger Price of King's Chapel as commissary of the Bishop of London. The building was erected without further delay, and on August 15th 1735, had opened for worship. It was a wooden structure,
90 by 50 feet, and 30 feet stud. It was a plain affair, with gambrel
roof, standing with its end to the street.
In 1828, this building was taken down, and on September 17th of that year the cornerstone was laid for the second church
building. The features of the latter were its massive walls
and its stately tower. It was a solid Gothic structure, and
intended to reproduce the Old English type of Episcopal temple. It was destroyed in the
Great
Fire of 1872, and its broken tower and partly crumbled massive walls
formed a most picturesque ruin after the havoc of the flames. Coincidentally, in the winter preceding this disaster, the parish had referred the subject of a
new church building to a building committee, and eventually the designs of
the architects for the church now standing were accepted. The new Trinity
was then built and completed in the winter of 1877.

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