Fire Destroys Chicago Birthplace
of Gospel Music

Story by Margaret Foster / Jan. 9, 2006

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Built in 1891, the Chicago landmark became
the birthplace of gospel music in the 1930s. (Bob Thall/City
of Chicago)
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The Chicago church where Thomas A. Dorsey invented
gospel music in the 1930s is gone. On Jan. 6, a fire destroyed
the Pilgrim Baptist Church, designed by Louis H. Sullivan and
Dankmar Adler in 1891.
The blaze originated from the church's roof, which was in
the process of being repaired. Four firefighters sustained minor injuries.
Built as a synagogue in 1891, the Romanesque revival structure
became a baptist church in 1922. Dorsey (1899-1993), the father of gospel,
served as the church's music director for more than 50 years. It became
a city landmark in 1981.
Only three exterior walls remain after the fire, but some
people say it's possible to reconstruct Pilgrim Baptist Church, using
photographs and molds of the interior terracotta ornamentation.
"Given enough money, it could be replicated,"
says David Bahlman, executive director of the Landmarks Preservation Council
of Illinois. "Public sentiment today, via e-mail, is resoundingly
in favor of rebuilding." Still, he says, "We don't know what
the structural situation is of these three elevations that still stand.
There are a lot of questions at this point."
Because the aging church needed $2.8 million in urgent repairs,
the nonprofit Partners for Sacred Places named it one of Ten Sacred Places
to Save in 2001. The group reported on its Web site that the Pilgrim Baptist
Church's roof and interior downspouts leaked, causing water damage to
the interior molding, which "has fallen onto the choir area."
Bahlman, who visted the church several years ago, says it
was in good condition. "It was like a lot of 100-year old churches,
where you have dwindling congregations and not a lot of money to keep
things looking perfect," he says.
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