Thursday, November 20, 2014

Zion Lutheran Church Choir


Members of the Zion Lutheran Church Choir are pictured above in front of the organ pipes. The photograph, by Mound Studio in Sandusky, was taken between 1945 and 1955. Lovely stained glass windows are located on either side of the organ pipes. Harold Parker is in the front center of the picture. Mr. Parker, a well known Sandusky architect, directed the church choir at Zion Lutheran Church for twenty five years. The church building, at 503 Columbus Avenue, was dedicated on Sunday, November 12, 1899. The architect and builder of Zion Lutheran was George Feick.


Two histories of Sandusky’s Zion Lutheran Church are found in the local history section of the Sandusky Library. While the Sandusky Library Archives Research Center does not have an extensive history of every church in Erie County, Ohio, five archival boxes are devote to church histories in the Churches Collection of the Archives. Included in these files are histories of two African American churches, the Oheb Shalom Temple, along with historical information from several Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran, Methodist, United Church of Christ, Presbyterian, and Unitarian churches in the area. Church records are available on microfilm at the Sandusky Library Archives Research Center for these churches:
Holy Angels Catholic Church
Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic Church
St. Mary’s Catholic Church
St. Anthony Catholic Church (Milan)
Calvary Episcopal Church
St. John Lutheran Church
First Presbyterian Church
St. Stephen’s United Church of Christ
First Congregational Church of Christ

Erie County, Ohio is rich in church history, from circuit riding Methodists, to abolitionist Congregationalists, to German Lutherans and Catholic roots going back to Father J.P. Machbeuf. St. Stephen A.M.E. church was begun by several individuals who had previously been enslaved. Four churches can be seen in the picture below of Columbus Avenue, taken in the first half of the twentieth century. 


Visit the Sandusky Library Archives Research Center to view the Finding Aid for the Churches Collection.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

You referenced St.Stephens AME church as being founded by former slaves. It is commonly known and documented that Second Baptist Church founded in 1849 and known as the Anti-Slavery Baptist Church has the distinction and was also an Underground Railroad Station.