The Old First Church and Calvary

In 1817, First Presbyterian Church dedicated its first edifice at 1 Franklin Street, at the corner of North Street and facing municipal land where the fire station is today.

The Old First Church Auburn New York

The congregation outgrew the church and donated it to the Lansing Street Presbyterian Mission School. The building was dismantled and moved up the hill to 90 Franklin Street, land owned by Elder James Seymour. It was rebuilt 1869 as a smaller structure, known first as the Seymour Chapel but soon as Calvary Presbyterian Church.

Here is the oldest picture we have of Calvary, showing the entrance on the southeast corner, added in 1882.

Calvary Auburn New York 1882

In 1888 the building was raised off the foundation and a complete basement was built below the structure, which also was enlarged.

Calvary Auburn New York after 1888

For most of its life, Calvary looked like this. The original Corinthian detail of the Old First Church was preserved through 1972, when this picture was made.

Calvary Auburn New York 1972

Today the exterior is more plain, as the congregation removed the Corinthian capitals and sided the structure in 1973. Most of the architectural details remain beneath the siding. One capital is displayed inside the church.

Calvary Auburn New York 1976

The interior of the church when it was rebuilt in 1869 was Victorian. Here is a 1901 picture of the altar in the east end, showing the organ installed that year.

Calvary AUburn New York organ 1901

In 1919 the Austin organ was installed, as were new stained glass windows. Both remain today.

Calvary Auburn New York organ 1919

From late 1945 until 1949, Rev. George E. Davies led a building program to refurbish and modernize the interior. The work was done by John D'Arcangelo of Buffalo, New York. The Victorian interior was transformed into a colonial revival sanctuary of rare beauty. These pictures were made in 2007 to document the interior.

Calvary Auburn New York altar 2007

Calvary Auburn New York altar detail 2007

The Corinthian detail was reflected even in the Victorian interior, and highlighted in the transformation.

Calvary Auburn New York Corinthian detail 2007

The Old First Church interior has always remained in the west end of Calvary. Rev. Dirck Cornelius Lansing, a founder of the Auburn Theological Seminary, preached here, as did Rev. Charles Hawley, founder of the Cayuga County Historical Society and a beloved leader in the community. Calvary had the altar here from 1882 through 1888, when George Black Stewart, soon to be president of the Auburn Theological Seminary, was the minister.

Calvary Auburn New York arch 2007

On March 7, 1869 Rev. Hawley preached for the last time in the Old First Church. The morning sermon was a discourse on the history of the church.

Rev. Hawley's predecessor, Henry Addison Nelson, was invited to preach the last time, in the evening. Nelson had been called to First Presbyterian Church in St. Louis and by 1869 was known as having saved Missouri for the Union. Too taken up with duties at the Lane Theological Seminary to accept the invitation, Rev. Nelson sent a letter, which Rev. Hawley read. Rev. Nelson said:

"To preach the last sermon in that dear old church, the most beautiful structure, to my eyes, that they ever looked upon--in which I knelt to receive 'the laying on of hands of the Presbytery;' in which I first took upon my conscience the pastoral vows, and on my heart the sweet burden of the pastoral care; ... whose ... arches and pulpit, with every line and leaf in all its profuse and elaborate carving, are imprinted 'in my mind's eye,' ineffaceably; the very throbbing of whose wall behind me, at the strokes of its bell, made it seem alive; that blessed old edifice, now about to resound for the last time to the voice of a preacher, and the privilege offered to me that it should be my voice!"

Rev. Nelson lived a long time after 1869, and witnessed the building resounding again to the bell, the music, and the voices of the faithful. Today Calvary is the mission site of Calvary Food Pantry and the Presbytery of Cayuga-Syracuse is developing other uses of the building for misson, education, and worship.