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Home > California > Menlo Park > Church of the Nativity, 210 Oak Grove Avenue, Menlo Park, San Mateo County, CA



See 18 maps of this location


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Item Title
Church of the Nativity, 210 Oak Grove Avenue, Menlo Park, San Mateo County, CA

Location
210 Oak Grove Avenue, Menlo Park, CA

Find maps of Menlo Park, CA


Created/Published
Documentation compiled after 1933.

Notes
Survey number HABS CA-1995
Unprocessed field note material exists for this structure (FN-190).
Building/structure dates: 1872 initial construction
Building/structure dates: 1877
Building/structure dates: 1878
Building/structure dates: 1887 subsequent work
Building/structure dates: 1900 subsequent work
Significance: A year after the closing of St. Dennis Church, the first Catholic Church in the area, in 1871, this church was built as a mission. It gained the status of a parish church in 1877. The building, originally known as St. Bridget's, is one of the finest wood-framed churches in the county. The first school classes in Menlo Park were held at this church. / Founded in 1872, this church was built as a mission, becoming a parish church five years later. Originally 36' x 67', the church was moved to its present site in 1878 after a brief intermediate stop. In 1887, the church was raised on a brick foundation and the transept and sanctuary were added, roughly doubling the size of the building. The rose window was added in 1900. The strict Gothic Revival form and details demonstrate a remarkable adherence to an older architectural idiom, perhaps in a deliberate attempt to blend the numerous additions with the original church building, as evidenced by: the symmetrical plan, central front tower, lancet windows, decorative wood buttresses, trefoil tracery, and a generally understated, minimal use of ornamentation. Even the latest additions in the rear are carefully incorporated into the overall Gothic form. The three part nave is spanned by a series of hammer beam trusses of redwood. Stained glass leaded windows line the walls dominated by an elaborate rose window set above the altar. The church has always acted as an educational, social, and religious center of Menlo Park, and remains today as a beautifully integrated history of the architecture and civic concern of the parish.

Related Names
Doyle, James R.


Collection
Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress)

Contents
Photograph caption(s): 
1. SOUTHEAST FRONT
2. SOUTHEAST FRONT, CLOSER
3. SOUTHEAST FRONT AND NORTHEAST SIDE
4. NORTHWEST SIDE FROM NORTH
5. NORTHWEST SIDE
6. SOUTHWEST SIDE FROM WEST
7. SOUTH SIDE FROM WEST, CLOSER
8. SOUTHEAST FRONT, DETAIL OF ENTRANCE
9. SOUTHEAST FRONT, DETAIL OF BASE OF STEEPLE
10. SOUTHWEST TRANSEPT, DETAIL OF CROSS
11. SOUTHWEST SIDE, DETAIL OF WINDOW
12. NORTHWEST TRANSEPT, DETAIL OF DOORWAY
13. INTERIOR, LOOKING NORTHWEST TO ALTAR
14. DETAIL OF PEWS
15. DETAIL OF CONFESSIONAL
16. DETAIL OF COLUMNS AND BRACKETS
17. DETAIL OF ALTAR
18. DETAIL OF ROSE WINDOW
19. NORTHEAST TRANSEPT, WINDOW
20. NORTHEAST TRANSEPT, DETAIL OF WINDOW
SOUTHEAST FRONT
DETAIL OF ROSE WINDOW
NORTHEAST TRANSEPT, DETAIL OF WINDOW


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