On this day in 1789, the first President of the United
States, George Washington, was sworn in at Federal Hall in New York City. As
everyone knows, New York City was our nation’s capital from 1785 to 1790.
Immediately afterwards, he walked down to a service at St. Paul’s Chapel.
“When it first opened in 1766 as an outreach chapel of Trinity Church to better
serve its expanding congregation, St. Paul’s was a “chapel-of-ease” for those
who did not want to walk a few blocks south along unpaved streets to Trinity. A
decade later, the Great Fire of 1776 destroyed the first Trinity Church, but
St. Paul’s survived, thanks to a bucket brigade dousing the building with
water.
Until the second Trinity Church was rebuilt in 1790, many, including George
Washington, made St. Paul’s their church home. On April 30, 1789, after
Washington took the oath of office to become the first President of the United
States, he made his way from Federal Hall on Wall Street to St. Paul’s Chapel,
where he attended services.
Over the next two centuries, the ministries of St. Paul’s expanded along with
the city. Community outreach was a primary focus, with services to accommodate
the needs of immigrants, working women, and the homeless.
After September 11, 2001, St. Paul’s became the site of an extraordinary,
round-the-clock relief ministry to rescue and recovery workers for nine months.
Though the World Trade Center buildings collapsed just across the street, there
was no damage to St. Paul’s, earning it the nickname ‘the little chapel that
stood.’”
https://trinitywallstreet.org/visit/st-pauls-chapel/911
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