Font in Holy Comforter Church - Montgomery, Alabama
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member xptwo
N 32° 19.735 W 086° 15.910
16S E 569160 N 3577131
The stone baptismal font is one of the items from the church built in the late 1800s when the Church of the Holy Comforter was revived.
Waymark Code: WMDZ0N
Location: Alabama, United States
Date Posted: 03/11/2012
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Dragontree
Views: 2

The Church of the Holy Comforter Episcopal Church was originally organized by Civil War refugees from Christ Church in Pensacola, Florida, in 1864. It went dormant after the war but was reorganized by the remaining vestry members in 1885. They purchased a lot on Root Stret, now South Goldthwaite Street, in 1886 and built a church building which was paid for by 1887. The church was consecrated by Bishop Wilmer of Alabama on June 15, 1887. With the growth in population after World War Two. the parish decided to move to a new part of Montgomery in the late 1950s. They purchased propery and moved from South Goldthwaite Street to their current location in 1960 when the current church was built.

One interesting feature of the church is that they designed the current church to resemble the old church building so they could bring the stained glass windows, the reredos, and other furnishings with them. The interior features an interesting woodwork pattern that helps one appreciate the ship qualities of the nave. In researching the history, I found that one of the vestrymen who was instrumental in reviving the parish was Samuel Goode Jones (1815-1886), to whom the baptismal font is dedicated, and who was the father of Thomas Goode Jones, the Governor of Alabama in the 1890s. My source for the history was "Half a Century -- and more" by Lucharlle Clayton Wilson, published in Montgomery in 1940 and found in the Rare Books Collection of the Montgomery Public Library (RARE/283/Wil).
Relevant Website: [Web Link]

Approximate Age of Artefact: Not listed

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