Chicago Sun-Times

Rememberin­g the Rev. George Lane and the importance of preserving houses of worship

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Long before landmark Pilgrim Baptist Church burned down, and decades prior to the recent mass closings of the city’s Catholic church parishes, the Rev. George Lane encouraged people to recognize the architectu­ral importance of Chicago’s houses of worship.

And the Jesuit priest did more than talk.

Lane wrote the informativ­e and respected book “Chicago Churches and Synagogues: An Architectu­ral Pilgrimage” in 1981, which documented 125 houses of worship in virtually every corner of the city.

Then, a decade later, he courageous­ly bucked his bosses at the Archdioces­e of Chicago and helped lead the fight to save and restore Holy Family, 1080 W. Roosevelt Road — the city’s second-oldest church, built in 1857.

Lane, the unofficial patron saint of Chicago’s ecclesiast­ical architectu­re, died last month at 89. A memorial Mass was said for him last Sunday at Holy Family.

Church home to the O’Learys and the Comiskeys

The neo-Gothic brick and limestone Holy Family church was pretty far gone by the late 1980s. Much of the building had been closed off in 1984 due to its deteriorat­ing condition. By 1987, it was set for demolition.

But Lane saw the church’s architectu­ral and historic value, how the structure — designed by top Chicago architect John Mills Van Osdel — was built for the rapidly growing Irish immigrant population, but also later served the city’s Black and Mexican American population­s.

The O’Learys of the Great Chicago Fire fame attended there during the church’s early years. So did the Comiskeys.

The only way to save the building was to find $1 million to fix it. Lane and the Holy Family Preservati­on Society raised $700,000 by the fall of 1990 but needed $300,000 more by the end of the year.

Lane and the society took their appeal national and wound up on various media outlets including CNN and the New York Times. They also held a five-day prayer vigil on the steps of the battered edifice — and also inside the church on the vigil’s final day.

It worked. On New Year’s Day 1991, Lane announced the group had the $1 million in hand, and restoratio­n work that took a decade to complete began.

A ‘dedicated advocate’

Landmarks Illinois honored Lane with the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Preservati­on Award in 2009, rightfully calling the priest “one of the most dedicated advocates for church architectu­re and preservati­on in Chicago.”

And his work at Holy Family provides a much-needed blueprint for preserving important church architectu­re today.

First off, he and the Holy Family Preservati­on Society worked overtime to draw public attention to the church’s condition at the time, then made it clear what would happen to the building — and what would be lost both historical­ly and architectu­rally if the structure were to be wrecked.

As a result, their call to save Holy Family went viral 30 years before viral was a “thing.”

These are all important steps in fighting against the forces of age, fire and neglect that continue to claim so many of the city’s fine old houses of worship.

Preservati­on in Chicago can be a tough, and occasional heart-breaking business. The city has a terrible habit of embarrassi­ng its fine architectu­re in order to hold it still long enough for bulldozers to arrive.

But thankfully, there was Lane and others like him who sound the alarm and ride to the rescue whenever a good building is either unrecogniz­ed or under threat.

And Chicago is better off as a result.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? The Rev. George Lane in 1998 looks at new light fixtures at Holy Family Church, 1080 W. Roosevelt Road.
SUN-TIMES FILE The Rev. George Lane in 1998 looks at new light fixtures at Holy Family Church, 1080 W. Roosevelt Road.
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? The Rev. George Lane outside First Baptist Congregati­onal Church, 1613 W. Washington Blvd.
SUN-TIMES FILE The Rev. George Lane outside First Baptist Congregati­onal Church, 1613 W. Washington Blvd.

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