Universalist antecedents,
and early efforts to form a Unitarian Fellowship in the Lafayette
area
City records show that Universalists had been active in
the Lafayette area from 1838 until disbanding in the early 1900's.
Our modern history started with the formation of a small Unitarian
group. This happened on January 9, 1949, when, with 16 persons present,
an organizational meeting was held in the home of Dorothea and Raymond
Girton. Subsequent meetings took place at various members' homes,
and also in the then Fowler Hotel. This early group disbanded October
18, 1950, and turned over its $15.24 treasury to All Souls UU Church
in Indianapolis. On December 2, 1951, a group of 14 persons
met, again at the Girton home, to reactivate this religious community.
From these early times and until just recently, we named and listed
ourselves as a Fellowship. The new Girton group met on alternate
Sundays at the Hillel Foundation. A Sunday school program for children
started in 1952. Up to 18 children attended in 1953, when meetings
were moved to the Canterbury House. During 1954, the Reverend Jack
Mendelsohn of All Souls Unitarian Church in Indianapolis visited
and held a service in West Lafayette once a month. The Sunday school
was discontinued in 1956 and but was re-activated in 1957.
Sojourn in West Lafayette:
Ministers, Buildings, and Religious Education
In 1958, the Fellowship purchased a house for $15,000 at
439 Harrison Street in West Lafayette, after a fund drive raised
$2,300 and annual pledges reached $2,800. The first meeting at Harrison
Street was held October of that year. The Fellowship was incorporated
in 1959. By then, the Sunday School attendance grew from 18 (in
1953) to 60 children and youth. Reverend Mendelsohn stopped coming
to Lafayette but guest ministers frequently led services during
these years. 1961 was the year that the Unitarian and Universalist
religious organizations formally merged as a single national entity,
the Unitarian Universalist Associate (UUA). In 1961, the year of
the merger, the 50 members called the Reverend R. Hoagland to be
the part-time minister. He led services on the first and third Sundays
of the month. Average Sunday School attendance during this period
was 50. The Fellowship outgrew its Harrison Street quarters very
shortly and sold the property in 1963. Two adjacent properties at
the corner of Wood and Chauncey Streets in West Lafayette were acquired
by the group, at that time consisting of 45 pledging units (families
and individuals), and the Fellowship took up occupancy shortly after.
At this time the Reverend Edwin Wilson was called as a part-time
minister. He came over from Yellow Springs, Ohio, for two consecutive
Sundays a month, staying over in West Lafayette for the intervening
week. Reverend Wilson was active in the American Religious Humanist
movement, and the first editor of the Humanist, a publication
of the American Humanist Association. By 1966, there were about
100 active congregants, and 75-80 children attending Sunday School.
Reverend Wilson resigned in October of 1967, but corresponded with
us from his home in Florida until his death in 1993 at age 94.
In 1968, Charles S.
Slap was called as part-time minister, while completing his studies
at Meadville Lombard Theological School in Chicago. He became the
full-time minister in March of 1969. The Fellowship then had 56
pledging units, and supported an $18,000 operating budget. Reverend
Slap resigned in the fall of 1971, accepting a call to the church
in Davis, California. In May, 1972, the Reverend Kenneth G. Hurto
was called as minister of our congregation. In 1973, we purchased
the property adjacent to the Fellowship house at Wood and Chauncey
Streets, in the hopes of building a church on the enlarged site
some time in the future. Architectural plans for such a structure
were generated, but were felt to be beyond the resources of the
group at that time. In 1975, support dwindled, Sunday School
enrollment had fallen off, and many of the original founders and
stalwarts of the congregation had moved out of the Lafayette area
or had become inactive. Reverend Hurto resigned in August, 1975,
to become minister of the First Church, Des Moines, Iowa. At this
low point, the West Lafayette Park Board made a generous offer of
$88,000 to buy the Wood and Chauncey Street properties in toto.
This offer was accepted. It should be noted that the area was later
converted into a popular neighborhood park, now named the Tommy
Johnston Neighborhood Park. The congregation, while still using
the Wood and Chauncey Street facilities, considered that need for
both a new minister as well as for a new church home. The decision
was made to initiate a search for a new home, and to defer a ministerial
search till a later, unspecified date.
The Fellowship finds
a new home in Lafayette
After
a Building Search covering many possibilities in both West Lafayette
and Lafayette, the availability of the former Temple Israel building
in downtown Lafayette was discovered. Protracted negotiations with
the American Red Cross, the then owners of this building, led to
its purchase in 1976 for a sum of $30,000. Originally constructed
in 1867, the building had been sold to the Red Cross in 1969. Used
by the Red Cross for storage and training purposes in subsequent
years, it had suffered the effects of vandalism and neglect. The
congregation moved immediately to the building, and a three-year
renovation program was undertaken. A new roof and repair of the
stained glass windows were among the first tasks. Extensive plastering,
re-wiring, painting, siding work and carpeting were additional projects;
much of the work done by Fellowship members. A special grant from
the Loeb Foundation made it possible to sandblast the brick exterior,
with final tuck-pointing and sealing completed by the spring of
1979. Preserving the character of the building’s architecture was
a primary goal of the restoration work. The building was listed
on the Historical Registry. Building dedication ceremonies were
held during the week of April 22-29, 1979.
Reverend Libbie Stoddard
begins tenure as Minister
In 1980, the Reverend Will Saunders served the Fellowship
for six weeks through the UUA Minister-On-Loan program. With his
stimulus and encouragement, a Search for a full-time minister was
undertaken. The Reverend Libbie Stoddard accepted the call as full-time
minister, to begin in December. During 1981, the Fellowship
had an operating budget of $30,000. Sunday attendance and the size
of Religious Education program showed steady growth. In 1983,
the Fellowship changed its name from Unitarian to Unitarian Universalist,
consistent with the national merger of the two denominations in
1961.
Building renovations
The Fellowship voted to renovate the building in December
of 1988, with the goals of adding wheel-chair accessibility and
an additional staircase which would meet the fire code. A major
fund-raising drive was successfully conducted. In 1989, the
operating budget had reached $50,000. In the Spring of 1989, a decision
was made to include plans to renovate the first floor of the building
when the accessibility renovation took place. During a part
of the renovation period, Sunday Services and Religious Education
classes were held at Wabash Center on Greenbush Street. Renovations
were completed and the Fellowship building reoccupied again in May,
1992. An Open House was held on June 7, 1992.
Growth of professional
staff
The Fellowship Staff was enlarged in 1994 to include our
first paid Religious Education Director: Kaye McSpadden, a longtime
volunteer in this position, was hired.
Recent changes: Fellowship
to Church, the Welcoming Congregation, Space Search, Double Services,
New Property Purchase, New Minister
The congregation voted to a change in name from "Fellowship"
to "Church" in December, 1996. In a congregational meeting
on April 27, 1997, we voted to become a Welcoming
Congregation, a designation publicly signifying that we are
a religious community which is welcoming to gays, lesbians, and
bisexuals. Growth in
membership, attendance at Sunday Services, and rapid increases in
Religious Education class enrollments forced the use of non-church
spaces, and stimulated an active search for enlarged quarters for
the congregation and its many activities. A partial response to
space and facilities needs was the instituting of double services
and double Religious Education classes in September, 1997, and lasting
till June, 1999. On September 29,
1997, our Unitarian Universalist Church bought property at 2239
Union Street, with the intention of building a church at this location
during the coming years. A Comprehensive Planning Committee was
formed to plan for this new
church home. On April 26, 1998, architect Dean Upshaw was hired
to develop the plans for the church.
On
May 31, 1998, Reverend Libbie Stoddard resigned because of the need
to become a caregiver for a chronically ill daughter and her family.
Reverend Robert Flanders was called as an interim minister. He served
for two years, during which time the congregation undertook a search
for a permanent minister. In the spring of 2000 the congregation
voted overwhelmingly to call Hilary Landau
Krivchenia as the new permanent minister. She began serving
in August, 2000. An Installation and Ordination Service was held
in October.