HISTORIC GARY CHURCH SET FOR WRECKING
BALL
BY: ANDY GRIMM
POST-TRIBUNE
JUNE 7, 2005
Donald Housekeeper was in the choir when City Methodist
Church opened in 1926, and he was on the church board that
voted to close the aging building in the 1970s.
When the towering, gothic church is demolished later this
month, Housekeeper, 90, said he will probably be at home
in Merrillville with the woman he married at City Methodist
in 1943.
“If they go ahead and knock it down, they’re going to have
a lot of work on their hands,” he said. “It’s solid as a
rock. It’s a cathedral.”
Once a social and cultural hub for Garyites of all denominations,
the spectre of the wrecking ball has dangled over the 79-year-old
church on 6th and Washington for decades as the fortress-like
building gradually crumbled.
A demolition contractor could start work as soon as next
month.
“People have been talking about (saving) it, but no one
has come to us with a plan and the dollars,” said city spokeswoman
Lalosa Burns. “It’s been on and off the demolition list
for years.”
The City Methodist footprint will be paved into a parking
lot for senior citizens in the neighboring Genesis Towers.
Across 6th from City Methodist, Gary Housing Authority crews
are clearing the way for the $14 million Horace Mann development,
a neighborhood where the crumbling church does not belong,
said Joseph Shuldiner, the city’s Hope VI consultant.
“For now it’s still there, empty and foreboding,” Shuldiner
said. “We’re building new housing and ... having a vacant
abandoned building is not conducive to marketing.”
City Methodist declined rapidly since it was damaged in
a fire that swept through much of downtown in 1997.
While the stone walls were mostly unharmed by the flames,
the roof has crumbled and trees sprout from the sanctuary
floor through gaping holes in the shingles.
Pigeons and stray dogs take shelter within the church. The
lone improvement since the 1970s came a few years ago, when
the city installed a barbed wire fence around the building.
The building was featured in a photo book titled “Urban
Ruins,” said James Lane, a Gary historian and Indiana University
Northwest professor.
“(The photographer) was using this as a symbol of a throw-away
society,” Lane said.
The church was built as a symbol of decency in the heart
of a rowdy, irreligious Gary that was less than 20 years
old.
Even in the 1920s, the neighborhood around the church wasn’t
ideal. In a letter soliciting money, one civic leader wrote
of the adolescent steeltown: “Down here are saloons and
dance halls and brothels where God is forgotten.”
Lane’s Gary history, “City of the Century” recalls city
founder Elbert Gary’s reaction U.S. Steel executives were
asked for a donation to pay for the downtown church: “(Expletive),
men, they want to build a church in our town.”
U.S. Steel gave $365,000 of the $800,000 it cost to build
the church. Judge Gary would personally donate an elaborately
decorated organ to the church.
The church and adjoining Seaman Hall were centers of cultural
life in Gary until the early 1970s, with Seaman Hall hosting
plays, musicals and pageants open to all city residents.
The congregation peaked at around 2,000 members during the
1950s, Housekeeper recalls. The saloons and dance halls
were faring about as well as the church, Lane said.
Seaman Hall housed an Indiana University branch campus that
would become IUN, and students could see revelers headed
to the Washington Street red light district.
“It got to be too dangerous. We had a wedding where the
father of the bride’s car was stolen during the ceremony,”
Housekeeper said.
“People were afraid to come down to anything but in the
daytime and only in the middle of the daytime, so there
was no evening programs,” he said. “There used to be a lot
of activity almost any hour of the day and most evenings.”
By the late 1970s, City Methodist had fewer than 200 members,
and offerings weren’t enough to even pay the utility bills,
much less repair the antique organ, leaking roof and failing
boilers. Church leaders attempted to find a congregation
interested in the structure, but no group wanted to take
on the expense of maintaining the enormous church.
Housekeeper is not sure when the church was finally entirely
abandoned.
Rehabilitating City Methodist would take millions, Shuldiner
said. In its current state, the building would be an eyesore
and a hazard for residents in the 123-unit housing development
slated to begin construction later this month, he said.
“I can’t think of a use for it that would justify the cost
of rehabilitating it,” he said. “We would like to see it
demolished.”
Housekeeper has attended church in Merrillville since City
Methodist closed, and hasn’t seen the building in years.
He chooses to recall happier times, like nights at Seaman
Hall plays or weddings of friends and family.
“That was one of the better places to get married,” he said.
“In my time that was what you wanted for a wedding, something
grand.”
