| |
Welcome to
First Church of Christ, Scientist
Cortland, New York
WE ARE IN TRANSITION!!! Our former building has
been sold to another church organization and we are now meeting upstairs at 9 Clinton Ave, Cortland with a temporary Reading
Room, Sunday school rooms and meeting room. Re-construction is going on now and we hope to be using the
street level for services and Reading Room before the end of this year!
Our service times remain the same at 10:30 AM for Sunday services and
Sunday School and 7:30 PM for Wednesday testimony meetings. Our phone number of 607-756-7626 will be rolling over to the Clerk's
home phone until access is available at our new building. Our new mailing address is PO Box 294, Homer, NY,13077.
Our History
At about 1894 a group of interested
people began holding Christian Science services at the home of Mr. And Mrs. William J Hollenbeck at 35 Union Street in Cortland.
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Cortland, was organized in 1897, and the first meeting was held in the rooms of the Vesta
Lodge, I.O.O.F. Building, 67 Main Street. Services were later held in the Samson Block, corner Main Street and Groton Avenue,
where Mrs. Edith Chase with Miss Mary Piper, as student of Mary Baker Eddy, Discoverer and Founder of Christian Science, organized
a Sunday School. A Christian Science Reading Room was also maintained in this building. A lecture by Carl Norton in
1898, shortly after the organization of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, marked another milestone in the local
progress of Christian Science. Unfortunately, in 1902 and 1903, many of the pioneer workers in this church moved away,
and although the organization was financially sound, it seemed best to disband. In June 1910, Albert Brooks, a local
photographer, invited those interested to meet at his home on Monroe Heights. Several months later a permit was obtained to
use the office of the Conservatory of Music on Court Street, for church services. After two years this proved too small
and the auditorium in the same building was rented. The Society enjoyed consistent growth here for several years. Invitation
by First Universalist Church on Church Street, to hold services in the edifice of that church at hours other than the usual
Universalist service, was accepted for about a year, at one time during this period. In 1918, a church charter was obtained
and a desirable dwelling at the corner of East Court and Greenbush Streets was purchased and remodeled as a church home.
This was dedicated in 1922. Construction on the present building began in October 1941, while services were held temporarily
in the I.O.O.F. Hall on Tompkins Street. On March 1, 1942, the first service was held in the new edifice, and on January
31, 1943, this church was dedicated. A reading room was maintained at the Greenbush address for a few years following
the purchase of the property in 1918. Then in 1924, it was moved to the third floor of the Newberry Building on Main
Street, where it remained until November 1955, at which time the church was able to obtain a ground-floor location for its
reading room at 21 ½ Clinton Avenue. After 22 years at this site, in October 1978, it was moved to 41 Central Avenue.
In 1995, the reading room was returned to the church building.
|