St. Patrick’s Cathedral
St. Patrick’s Cathedral
Fifth Avenue and 50th StreetNew York, NY 10022
212 753 2261
saintpatrickscathedral.org
As a proud New Yorker for many years, I would always stop by St. Patrick’s Cathedral while showing visitors the city. After walking all of the side streets on the Manhattan grid, I have discovered many magnificent churches in New York. I am still incredibly moved, however, every time I step inside St. Pat’s. For me, it possesses all the grandeur of a Western European cathedral, yet it is right here in the heart of Midtown.
Home to the seat of the archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, St. Patrick’s Cathedral was built between 1858 and 1878 (construction was halted during the Civil War). A National Landmark, it was designed by James Renwick Jr. in the image of a thirteenth-century-style Gothic church with flying buttresses snaking up the walls, supporting the almost 340-foot structure, it boasts beautiful stained glass windows that softly diffuse the afternoon light. In the fall of 2014, the church is halfway through their multi-year renovation and cleaning. Although the interior and exterior are currently covered in scaffolding, the church maintains its majestic appearance and generates exhilaration as its restored marble facing is meticulously unveiled from the spires downward.