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First |
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Our History
The First
Presbyterian Church of Cadillac is the oldest church building in
Cadillac still in use as a church.
In the
winter of 1874, a frame church building was completed on the present
church site. The land had been set aside by George Mitchell, the founder
of Cadillac, for this purpose. (He gave land for several church sites,
as well as the school.) That church burned in 1903. The church
that now stands at the corner of Harris and Simon Streets was built
during the period 1904-1906. The cost was approximately $20,000. The
original first floor ended at the north sanctuary wall. In the 1950’s
the education annex was built. The beautiful stained glass windows were purchased from Schuler and Mueller in Chicago for $660.64, including installation. They were installed in 1905. (The windows were removed, cleaned, and repaired in the 1980’s at a cost of $47,000. The present replacement cost would be somewhere around $2,000,000.) The original contract specified “the glass in the above windows to be opalescent, the lead best-quality, and the workmanship first class. The entire work being guaranteed wind-and-waterproof.” Betty Best, in her book on the history of the church “First Presbyterian Church, The First Century,” says, “The subject matter of the windows gives evidence of thoughtful consideration in design. The message of the gospel is presented in both scene and symbol with a total emphasis upon the New Testament. There is, in fact, a noticeable absence of references to the patriarchs of the Old Testament common to many church windows; instead Jesus is the focal subject in every window.
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221 E. Harris
Street ....... Cadillac, Michigan |
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