Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Historic Edgewater church for sale; neighbors worry what comes next

Unable to afford upkeep, Epworth United Methodist is looking for a new owner for 130-year-old building

- MARK BROWN,

Ahistoric Edgewater church that houses a vital men’s homeless shelter is up for sale, creating uncertaint­y about the future of both.

Epworth United Methodist Church, 5253 N. Kenmore Ave., has been a neighborho­od landmark for more than 130 years, its distinctiv­e boulder walls dating to when the newly developing Edgewater community was annexed into Chicago.

But a once-thriving congregati­on that could fill a sanctuary built for 600 people now numbers only 30 to 35 members. And the surviving worshipers can’t afford the upkeep on the aging 22,500-squarefoot structure.

That’s an old but increasing­ly common story in Chicago. It’s a problem that crosses neighborho­ods and denominati­ons, as city dwellers turn away from organized religion, leaving church buildings underused and without resources for repairs.

Maybe some other day we can explore the broader implicatio­ns of these dying churches and what one Epworth parishione­r calls the “spiritual deserts” being left in their wake — parts of the city where soon there might no longer be any house of worship within walking distance.

For now, let’s stick with the effort to save Epworth United Methodist as a contributo­r to the community it for so long has served.

Over the past four decades, one of the church’s most important roles has been to provide space for a homeless shelter with beds for up to 67 men who sleep in the building’s second-floor gymnasium. The shelter, operated since 2009 by Cornerston­e Community Outreach, is one of the last homeless shelters for men on the North Side and the only one in Edgewater.

Since last year, the shelter has been operating at about two-thirds capacity because of social distancing requiremen­ts forced by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Cornerston­e officials say they have a contract to rent the church space through the end of the year and are exploring their options if forced to move by a new owner. For now, they don’t want to cause undue alarm for their homeless clients.

In addition to the homeless shelter, the church operates a Girl Scouts program, provides school supplies for neighborho­od children and, in pre-COVID times, has been an important community gathering spot.

The planned sale of the church was brought to my attention by Anne Sullivan, a self-described community “troublemak­er” who lives next door to Epworth in a senior apartment building. Fearful that a sale could see the church torn down to make way for a high-rise residentia­l developmen­t, Sullivan started a petition drive to win city landmark protection for the building. It’s already on the National Register of Historic Places, but that designatio­n affords it little practical protection.

Sullivan says she has been met with an outpouring of support from neighbors fond of the familiar, old structure.

Ald. Harry Osterman (48th) agrees Epworth is a “very important part of the fabric of the community.”

“My goal is to save the building, make it be more functional,” Osterman says. “I don’t want some developer to knock it down and build condos. There will not be a high-rise there, period.”

Osterman says he considers the church a “historic building” and says he is exploring legal options for protecting it but suggests that he’d prefer to work cooperativ­ely with a nonprofit owner interested in some “good community adaptive reuse.”

Osterman says he’s hoping to keep the shelter there but that, if that’s not possible, promises to work with Cornerston­e to “find them another place in the community.”

I toured the church with John Sansone, who chairs the Epworth trustees when he isn’t running the mail room at a downtown law firm.

The building has some significan­t problems, but it’s in better shape than many old churches in Chicago that I’ve visited. The foundation is settling, which has caused a large crack that’s visible along the top of the basement wall. But Sansone says the crack is no worse than when he joined the church 24 years ago.

“It’s not crumbling down,” he says of the structure.

Still, there’s no question the building needs serious work, “more than $500,000 to fix it,” says Sansone, and the congregati­on doesn’t have the money.

It was a previous repair to a buckling exterior wall on the east side of the church along the alley that forced the current situation. Unable to pay for the repairs, church members borrowed from the Methodist Church hierarchy and now can’t pay that back.

Sansone says four prospectiv­e buyers have expressed interest — including a developer and three church groups.

Let’s hope they find a way to keep this piece of history by making it a part of a better future for the residents of Edgewater.

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 ?? MARK BROWN/SUN-TIMES ?? Epworth United Methodist Church, 5253 N. Kenmore Ave., is noted for its exterior walls, which are clad in boulders brought in by barge from Wisconsin via Lake Michigan.
MARK BROWN/SUN-TIMES Epworth United Methodist Church, 5253 N. Kenmore Ave., is noted for its exterior walls, which are clad in boulders brought in by barge from Wisconsin via Lake Michigan.
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