Maple Street Chapel

220 S Main St, Lombard, IL 60148
Maple Street Chapel Maple Street Chapel is one of the popular Church located in 220 S Main St ,Lombard listed under Church in Lombard ,

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The Maple Street Chapel, is a historical Gothic Revival building in Lombard, Illinois, USA. It is owned by "The First Church of Lombard".HistoryThe congregation previously met in a building built in 1851 as "The Congregational Church of Babcock's Grove". The 170-seat structure known as the Maple Street Chapel and was dedicated on May 29, 1870. For the first fifty years, the south room functioned as a free public library of books from Josiah Torrey Reade, a former student of Amherst College. This was the villages very first library. The first Lombard kindergarten class was held in the church. The chapel's bell not only called the parishioners to service on Sunday's, it also summoned the village's volunteer fire department if there was a fire in town. Pews were rented to wealthy residents, with seats nearest the heater the most in demand. After the turn of the century, the Chapel even presented silent movies. The Maple Street Chapel was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.The Chapel is no longer used for ordinary church services, rather it is used for weddings, concerts, programs, etc. However, the congregation of the First Church of Lombard continues to be a part of the Lombard community but worship services are now held in an adjacent, 400-seat building. The First Church of Lombard is affiliated with the United Church of Christ. Their pastor since 2014 is the Rev. Jeffrey Phillips. While The First Church of Lombard still owns the building, its maintenance and preservation is entrusted to the Maple Street Chapel Preservation Society, Inc.ArchitectureThe Maple Street Chapel is a rectangular gable roof Gothic Revival church building. Its main facade faces the north. There are porches that provide entrance to the church on the northeast, the northwest and the southwest. The church has eleven large, decorative windows, five on the east and west sides and one on the north. There are six smaller, clear glass windows on the south and two on the north. The open belfry and spire forms a large tower at the north end of the building. There are smaller spires to the east and west of the tower on the north facade. The original north entrance of the building was removed in 1915 when Maple Street was paved; a replacement entrance was built in its place. Inside, the pews, wainscoting, and pine flooring are original.

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