Sulphur Springs was added to the list of mission
stations of the Missionary District of Northern Texas in 1864. 1878 is the
year the Episcopal Diocese of Dallas lists as the founding of St.
Philip's, though the historical marker lists the year as 1972.
Bishop Alexander Charles Garrett, the missionary bishop
of Northern Texas, described in a diary a visit to Sulphur Springs on
April 12, 1875. He spoke of the country as being rich and lovely with good
roads except through Sulphur Bottoms where his mules sank to their knees
every step for miles. On the following day, he visited all the church
families. Colonel Hoskins obtained the use of the Presbyterian Church for
a night service. It was a large unfinished building, well-filled but so
dimly lighted that the congregation could neither see nor be seen. At that
time there were 1,200 people in Sulphur Springs and 11 communicants in the
Episcopal Church. Mrs. Emma Gilbert was the first to be baptized and
confirmed.
From 1864 until Bishop Garrett’s visit in 1875, there
had been long periods when there had been no regular services. In 1872 the
Rev'd John Portnee visited Sulphur Springs. Though he was unable to remain
for a Sunday and conduct services, he saw on opening for the church. In
November that year, Bishop Gregg, accompanied by the Rev'd Francis R.
Starr and Edwin A. Wagner visited Sulphur Springs and made arrangements
for baptisms and confirmations and for future services by Father Starr.
Some date this as the beginning of St. Philip’s in Sulphur Springs.
Episcopalians met at the Presbyterian Church for more than 20 years.
In 1887 a lot was given for the building of
a church by C.M. Houston and his wife Nancy “to promote interest in
Christianity.” The trustees of the church--C.B. Stephenson, J.K. Milam and
S.L. Gilbert--accepted the land for the church and later conveyed it to
the Rt. Rev'd Alexander Charles Garrett, bishop of the Missionary District
of Northern Texas. The first Episcopal Church in Sulphur Springs was built
at 400 Houston Street at North Davis Street probably in 1895. Colonel
Stephenson and his daughter, Mrs. P.T. Tucker, were instrumental in
building the church.
The original structure was 53 feet in
length and 21 feet in width, with the vaulted ceiling as its most
attractive feature. The entrance on the south side opened into a
vestibule. There were three clear glass windows on the south, three on the
north side and two on the west. One chimney and a cross over the entrance
and another cross on the roof completed the building. In 1901, stained
glass replaced the clear glass over the altar as a memorial for William
Bowser Arthur, a member of the parish who died on July 13, 1901, at the
age of 18. The window was unveiled on the Sunday before Advent at 11:00
a.m. with The Rev'd E.H.J. Andrews and The Rev. H.M. Green officiating.
In 1917, wings for an organ and choir were
added to extend the building to the east. The addition was made largely
through the efforts of Louis H. Gould and W.R. Patrick with the help of
the citizens of Sulphur Springs. Later memorial windows were installed on
the east. Memorial windows for W.R. Patrick, William B. Arthur and Louis
H. Gould are now on the east wall of the nave of the church built in 1991.
The Rev'd Grover McElyea celebrated his
first service at St. Philip's on July 9, 1950, staying through November
23, 1952. During these two years, a parish hall was added to the west side
of the church, which included an office, a small kitchen, a central
meeting room, seven small Sunday School rooms, two power rooms and a hall.
It was connected to the original church by double doors. Father McElyea
and his wife did much of the work, installing the floor in the annex.
Father McElyea installed the altar rail, given by the Holy Cross Episcopal
Church in Paris, Texas.
The Parish Hall had many uses other than
the Sunday School, including church dinners, birthday parties, class
parties, and Scout activities as a meeting place for Cub Scouts and an
Explorer Post. An active Woman’s organization produced a Birthday Calendar
as a yearly project, widely accepted by the people of Sulphur Springs.
The Rev'd Hugh Majors was the vicar when
land was purchased and a complete new church was constructed and
consecrated in May 1991 east of downtown on College Street. The building
is a mixture of modern convenience and the traditional—all of the stained
glass windows and the wooden fixtures from the old church were installed
in the new buid.
The original building was moved to Heritage
Park a few blocks of its original location for almost a century. The
building is now a chapel at Heritage Park, which flower stained glass
replacing the religious glass that had been there, with a pump organ where
the altar had been and different wooden pews.
[Much of the early history of St. Philip’s
was taken from one compiled by Mrs. Robert (Majorie Sherwin) Alexander in
support of placing a Texas historical marker on St. Philip's in 1978.
Information about the William B. Arthur window is from a bulletin for the
unveiling ceremony found in the church files.]