First African New Church, about 1930. |
Ever made a cool $1.1 million in a year flipping a property without doing anything to it? The owner of this abandoned church building did in 2002. DCMud blog did a recent update on plans for the building here.
The large vacant church structure at 2105-2107 10th Street is significant both for its architectural history, having been designed by well known architect Paul J. Peltz, and for its social history, as a structure and site that has been continually occupied and owned by an African American religious congregation from 1879 to 2002.
The large vacant church structure at 2105-2107 10th Street is significant both for its architectural history, having been designed by well known architect Paul J. Peltz, and for its social history, as a structure and site that has been continually occupied and owned by an African American religious congregation from 1879 to 2002.
Its
current building has evolved from a major addition and substantial alteration
in 1896 to an existing, one story brick building that had been constructed
without a building permit sometime between 1887 and 1895. In 1896, it was significantly expanded by its
congregation with the addition of a large sanctuary on the third floor and a
large corner tower, designed by well-known architect Paul J. Pelz, creating the
church building that remains to this date.
The
adjacent corner lot at 10th and V Streets was the site of a wood
frame church for many years prior to the brick one story church building that
formed the basis for the structure that remains today. Its origins can be traced to the northwest
corner of Vermont and T Streets, in 1878, when the Abyssinian Baptist Church
was first listed in the City Directory.
At the time, Reverend Henry Bailey was in charge of the small
congregation that worshiped there in a one story, frame building. Bailey lived at 1818 Vermont Avenue, and the
year later at 1814 Vermont Avenue.
However,
on March 14, 1879, the Abyssinian Baptist Church obtained a permit to move
their building to the “corner of 10th and V Street, NW.” The cost of this move was estimated at $50. It is assumed that the church moved its
church due to the increase of land value at Vermont and T Streets, as several
large homes were constructed that year and the year prior across the street,
and to gain a larger lot at 10th and V. Early maps show the new location of the frame
church resting directly on the corner of 10th and V Streets. Its congregation stemmed from freed slaves,
black Washington residents, and Civil War soldiers and their dependants that
had been stationed at nearby Fort Campbell at 6th and Florida
Avenue.
The church as an active worship site |
Along with the move
came a name change for the church, and possibly new ownership. The 1881 City Directory lists the Trinity
Methodist Episcopal Church at 10th and V Street, N.W. It was organized in 1880. The pastor in attendance was listed as
Reverend Peter C. Louis. Services were
held at 11 am and 7:30 pm, with Sunday school at 3 pm. City Directories classify the church as
“Methodist Episcopal-Colored.” Trinity
would remain at the 10th street address until 1892 when the church was renamed
“Zion.” On March 28, 1882, the church
obtained a permit to “repair building where damaged by fire.” Washington DC Fire Department records
indicate that a fire had occurred on January 30, 1882 that had caused an
estimated damage of $250.
An
1887 Baist map shows the square-shaped, wood frame building at the corner of 10th
and V Street, with a vacant rear yard facing the Union Court alley (where the
present day, brick church structure stands today). Sometime between 1887 and 1896, a one story,
brick church building was erected at the rear of the lot, apparently without a
building permit. It is likely that the
older wood frame building was no longer viable for maintenance, and a
replacement building constructed at the rear of the lots, facing 10th
Street, while the congregation continued to worship in the older
structure. The brick, one story building
was mentioned in an expansion permit dated 1896, when the church was
significantly added onto to create what is the present day building.
Funeral notice found in church building |
City
Directories indicate a change in name beginning in 1892 from Trinity Methodist
to Zion Church. The Zion Church had been
organized in 1883 by Reverend Peter C. Louis, the same pastor as Trinity,
according to the 1892 City Directory.
Reverend Louis lived close-by at 2100 Vermont Avenue and he provided
services from 11 to 7:30 pm. Sunday
School was held at 3 in the afternoon.
The church remained classified as “Methodist Episcopal-Colored” and
named “Zion” through 1894.
In 1894, the church changed ownership again, this time to
the “First Colored Society of New Jerusalem.”
By 1896, however, the church had changed ownership again, this time to
the First African New Church Society, which listed their address as “10th c V
NW” in the year city directories, which classified the church as
“Swedenborgian-Colored” in the church directory. That organization obtained a permit dated
January 15, 1896 to significantly expand a pre-existing brick structure on the
site.
They
hired architect Paul J. Pelz to design an upper floor atop an existing brick
structure and to design a corner tower.
The alteration resulted in the form of the church building seen today,
and serves to explain the presence of a large sanctuary on the raised, second
floor, as well as a far more grand and carefully designed larger sanctuary on
the top floor of the building. The cost
of the addition was estimated at $6,500. In 1873, Pelz and John L. Smithmeyer, another
Washington architect, won a competition for the design of the Library of
Congress that established them as major architects of the era.
2000 Photograph copyright PKW |
The
First African New Church Society continued to utilize the newly configured
structure from the time it was altered in 1896, when the City Directory
revealed that it housed the “New Jerusalem Church.” New Jerusalem had been founded in 1896,
though several City Directories claim earlier dates. On May 4, 1905, the church was purchased by
the People’s Seventh Day Adventist Church for $10,000. It is interesting to note that the New
Jerusalem Church at 2107 10th Street changes its listing from
“Swedenborgian-Colored” to “Colored-Seventh Day” just before the sale in
1905.
The
Peoples Seventh Day Adventist Church had been organized in 1903 by Reverend
Lewis C. Sheafe. Just prior to moving
into 2105-2107 10th Street, his congregation met at The United Order
of True Reformers Building close by at 1200 U Street.
1887 Hopkins Map |
It
was later renamed “Peoples Seventh Day Baptist Church” beginning in the early
1930s, and slightly altered in 1937 to become the “Peoples Seventh Day Baptist
Independent Church.”
Interestingly,
a permit dated July 7, 1921 indicates that the church desired to build an
outside meeting space “to be a permanent, open, one story pavilion, to conduct
religious services” on the empty lot to the south that had been formerly
occupied by the one story frame church.
The cost of the structure was estimated at $2,300. It had been designed by architect John B.
Tyrrell.
Main Sanctuary photographed in 2000 |
The 1943 City Directory shows the names of more than one congregation
practicing at 2101-07 10th Street N.W.
They included People's Seventh Day Baptist Independent Church, Temple
Baptist Church, Holy Trinity Apostolic Church, and Rising Star Baptist
Church.
The
church changed to Morning Bright Baptist Church in 1964, but is registered as
“Vacant” in 1970, shortly after racial riots devastated the neighborhood and
many other parts of Washington.
Envelopes found at the church reveal the name “True Deliverance Church
of God” at the location in 1971, with Pastor Rev. Albert Venson. At the time, the church functioned as a
center for clothing distribution to the homeless. The church building itself apparently does
not reopen for services until 1982.
Pentecost
Baptist Church becomes the new name and is led by Reverend Howard Walter Scott
and his mother, Reverend Thelma W. Scott.
The church was abandoned for the last time between 1992 and 1993. It was then purchased and secured by Peter
Means, but has since remained vacant and deteriorating, having been owned by
several developers since. It was
designated a DC Landmark as a result of the efforts of the Cardozo-Shaw
Neighborhood Association.
Interior, 2000. |
CSNA
learned that the church had been purchased on October 31, 2002 from a Mr.
Giles, who had been determined to be the last surviving congregation member of
the Peoples Seventh Day Adventist Church, the structure’s owner. Apparently, his ownership claim was news to
him, as the church had disbanded fifteen years prior, but had long ago begun to
rent the facility to a wide variety of churches under many names. According to records in the Recorder of
Deed’s offices, the new owners were Joyce Silverstang and Union Court
Development, LLC, who paid just $177,500 for the three-story structure and
adjoining vacant lot at the northeast corner of 10th and V Street,
N.W.
I
first began researching the church for developer Peter Means in the late 1990s. When it was threatened with demolition with
new owners in February of 2003, I surprised myself by producing a 24 page DC
Landmark nomination in just over 36 hours that included 124 years of its
history and 30 photographs of current and vintage shots for CSNA; its president
delivered the emergency nomination via his Vespa.
Today the church structure is owned by the Sorg architectural firm, who bought it in 2003 for $1.3 million: just a year after, and with no improvements, it had been sold for a mere $177,500.
Photographs and Text Copyright Paul K. Williams
a brilliant and exciting story!
ReplyDeleteDo you have anymore information of the church during the time it was Peoples Seventh-day Adventist Church? Any more pictures?
ReplyDeleteThat's about all we could find...the small African American churches tended to come and go, and move around a lot. I doubt their archives ended up anywhere. The last church to occupy the structure simply left all their archives in the church, which were promptly ruined by vandals and rain...
ReplyDeleteDid you miss a transaction .. I believe it was aquired by someone prior to the Sorg folks.
ReplyDeleteI love the old story or history like this. Does it survive now?
ReplyDeleteMaybe less people know anything about Africa. One of their place is called horn of africa
Trinity A.M.E. Zion church moved to 627 Park rd in 1944, then relocated to it's current location in the 3500 blk of 16th st. N.W.
ReplyDelete