Memorial Presbyterian Church

Memorial Presbyterian Church

Church - Historic Building/Landmark

Website: https://memorialpcusa.org/

 904-829-6451

 32 Sevilla Street, St. Augustine, FL 32084

The Presbyterian congregation in St. Augustine was organized in June 1824, during the Territorial Period of Florida’s history. Through the efforts of Reverend Dr. William McWhir, a minister with the Presbytery of Georgia, fourteen members formed the Presbyterian congregation. With the congregation operating on its own, Dr. McWhir returned to Georgia. The congregation immediately began making plans to construct a house of worship, and in January 1825, construction began on a sanctuary and continued for five years. The cost of the building totaled $5,000 with an additional $500 for the property on South St. George Street (located across the street from the current Cathedral Parish School gymnasium). By 1830, the building was finished and the congregation continues to grow its membership.

Over the years the church building served many needs within the community. During the Civil War, the Union army used the building for military purposes and services were not held in the building. At the end of the war, the church resumed weekly services. In 1866 the church purchased an existing home at the corner of Hypolita and St. George Streets to serve as the home of the minister and his family. The location placed the minister in a prominent location in the old city, reflective of the minister’s place in St. Augustine society. The Manse (term used for the residence of the Presbyterian minister) hosted a number of important visitors to the city as well as local organizations.

The present sanctuary was given by Henry Morrison Flagler and dedicated in 1890 as a memorial to his daughter Jenny Louise Benedict who died from complications from childbirth. Mr. Flagler, his first wife, Mary, daughter Jenny Louise and granddaughter, Marjorie, are entombed in the Flagler family mausoleum at Memorial.

Memorial Presbyterian was designed by Carrere & Hastings, the same firm which designed Flagler’s Ponce de Leon Hotel, Hotel Alcazar (today the Lightner Museum), and Grace United Methodist Church. Flagler’s other buildings utilized elements of Spanish, Moorish, and Baroque architecture, but the Memorial Church took inspiration from St. Mark’s Basilica constructed in the Venetian Renaissance style.

For almost 200 years, Memorial Presbyterian Church has not only remained a major figure in the St. Augustine skyline but also a major contributor to the community surrounding it. The church is an active congregation with a full range of worship, music, education, mission, fellowship, and pastoral ministries. Memorial Presbyterian Church members are vitally involved in the life and work of the community and the church reaches into the community.

Enjoy a tour of the church, Tuesday – Saturday 11 AM – 3:45 PM, by one of the trained docents during the week. Visitors come from across the state, the nation, and the world.

Location Info

Memorial Presbyterian Church

32 Sevilla Street

St. Augustine, FL 32084