“From East Genesee St. to East Genesee St.”
Our first organizational meeting was held in 1838 in the school house of a Dr. Mayo on Church Street. The first services were held in space borrowed from the First Methodist Episcopal Church. It was referred to as the Unitarian Church of Syracuse and also the Unitarian Congregational Society of Syracuse.
Our first building was a chapel, called “The Little Tabernacle,” that our
forbearers built in 1839 on East Genesee Street on a lot opposite what was
called the Grand Opera House. Thus, that is how we started on East Genesee
Street and once again are located on East Genesee Street.
Our second church building, the Unitarian Congregational Society of Syracuse (called the Church of the Messiah), was located on the southeast corner of Burnet Ave. and Lock St. It was dedicated November, 1843, and enlarged in 1850. On February 29, 1852, a big wind storm demolished the building. A new building was build on the same spot and dedicated in April, 1853.
Some 30 years later the tracks of a loud and busy railroad were laid nearby, necessitating the construction of a third building. May Memorial Church was dedicated at 742 James St. in October, 1885.
Louis Comfort Tiffany designed this window in 1903 for our James St. Church. It was the only one saved when the church was razed. Known as “New Jerusalem,” it can be seen in the entrance area of the Everson Museum of Art.
Continued growth, especially with Religious Education, necessitated a move
to a bigger building at 3800 E. Genesee St. Our current
home was dedicated October, 1964.
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