Old Finnish Lutheran Church - Lead, South Dakota
Posted by: Groundspeak Charter Member BruceS
N 44° 21.115 W 103° 45.853
13T E 598490 N 4911703
Historic former Lutheran Church in Lead, South Dakota.
Waymark Code: WMQBE3
Location: South Dakota, United States
Date Posted: 01/28/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 2

From National Register Nomination form:
Built in 1891 by John Niemi and John Saari the church is a basic naveplan form with a rectangular narthex surmounted by a square steeple and rectangular apse on the rear. This apse appears to be of a more recent date. Each side facade is pierced by three lancet-arched windows. Resting on a concrete foundation, the building is frame and covered in horizontal board siding. The front facade has two interesting details. One is the matching circular windows on the front facade of the nave and located above the rectangular windows which flank the entrance into the narthex. Secondly, the belfrey is open and has a flared-eave, octagonal roof; the belfry itself is built above a flared-eave, pyramidal roof. Recently loud speakers and signs have been mounted on the steeple. 

The interior has been radically changed and the building is now used as an art gallery and tourist gift shop. Behind a curtain covering the altar area is a painting of the Ascension of Christ. This was painted by Charles Alaniva, a Finnish miner and was installed in 1907.

The Finnish Evangelical Lutheran Church is significant as the only remaining institutional building which marks the history of the Finns in Lead. In addition the church retains an unusual altar painting, painted by one of its members in 1905-1907. 

This church was one of three Finnish Lutheran congregations in Lead and is the only one to have survived. The congregation worships across the street in the new First Lutheran Church building, erected in 1963 when several different Lutheran ethnic groups merged into the Lutheran Church in America. Although this congregation is long-lived, it suffered from strife, splinter groups and even total inactivity for several years. For, unlike the rural areas, the Finns in Lead tended to be young, single and highly mobile. The institutional permanence of the church was not as important as it was in areas of permanent, long-term, family settlement. 

In 1889 the Reverend Henry Tanner, a missionary from the Seaman's Mission Society in Finland, organized a Lutheran congregation. The congregants met first in the Methodist Church and temperance hall. However, many members decided they needed their own, non-secular, building. In 1891 this structure was erected. In the 1890s when the majority of the members voted to join the Evangelical of Suomi Synod, some congregants left to form their independent group. This congregation was comprised of miners, domestic workers and a few merchants.
The church building has been moved two times.  The first time in 1963 when a new church building was constructed.  The second time was in 1994 to accommodate an expansion of the Open Cut mine. The building is in very good condition and currently used as an art gallery and gift shop.
Wikipedia Url: [Web Link]

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KidWrangler visited Old Finnish Lutheran Church - Lead, South Dakota 07/07/2016 KidWrangler visited it