Saint John's Methodist Church - Stamford, TX
Posted by: WalksfarTX
N 32° 56.638 W 099° 48.017
14S E 425192 N 3645358
1910 Prairie Style Church designed by noted Dallas architect, James E. Flanders.
Waymark Code: WMZQA5
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 12/21/2018
Views: 3
NRHP Nomination FormThe Methodist congregation in Stamford emerged as soon as town building began. After using temporary quarters for several months, a lot was purchased in December of 1900, and a small frame building erected. In 1907 Stamford College was established in the south-eastern edge of town as a Methodist institution of higher learning. By early 1909 the growing congregation decided to build a new and impressive structure between downtown and the new college campus in order to serve both communities better.
After arranging initial financing (and later borrowing $15,000 from the Southern Union Life Insurance Co. of Waco), the church hired two contracting firms (E.J. Holderness Co. and C.S. Oates & Co.) and began the magnificent structure designed by James E. Flanders of Dallas. While construction began in 1910, it took two years of start-and-stop work to complete the exterior of the building.
Construction was interrupted by both funding problems and a direct hit by a tornado which severely damaged the unfinished building in 1910. The Methodist congregation chose Flanders to design their church because of his proven track record of impressive churches and courthouses in many Texas cities. Flanders produced an impressive design which uses the Prairie Style with some Gothic features to create a truly unusual structure.
Once the exterior was completed, funds dried up and work on the building slowed. The congregation moved into the building in February of 1912 but struggled for ten more years, until 1922, to complete the interior.
Since its exterior completion in 1912, St. John's Methodist has served as the spiritual home of the large Methodist congregation in Stamford. It has been the religious focal point for one of the town's largest congregations, as well as a local landmark for all its citizens. The church dominates the entire downtown area, towering over the lesser one-and two-story structures in the area. Architecturally it is an exquisite structure perfectly preserved since its original construction, and still servings its congregation faithfully after seven decades of use.