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1871
COMMUNION SET FROM
GERMAN
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH:
ROSENBERG LIBRARY’S SEPTEMBER TREASURE OF THE
MONTH

For its September Treasure of the Month, the Rosenberg Library
exhibited a pewter communion set used by the congregation of St.
Paul German Presbyterian Church in Galveston.
Organized in
1857, St. Paul’s
was located on the south side of Avenue H (Ball Avenue) between 16th Street
and 17th
Street.
The original wooden church building was among the many
structures destroyed by the devastating fire of November 13,
1885.
The fire, which began at a foundry
near The Strand and
17th
Street,
blazed its way north to south from the Strand to Avenue O, and east to west from 16th
Street
to
19th
Street.
Nearly 600
homes and 42 blocks of Galveston’s East End were
obliterated.
During
reconstruction of its own church, the congregation of
St. Paul’s was temporarily headquartered
at Trinity Episcopal’s Eaton Chapel. St.
Paul continued to serve
Galveston’s German Presbyterian community
until its dissolution in 1909.
When the church closed in 1909, the communion service was
placed in the custody of Elder Charles Angerhoffer.
It was the wish of Mr. and Mrs.
Angerhoffer that the set be given to the Rosenberg Library after
their deaths.
In 1951, the Presbytery of Houston
approved the request and donated the six-piece communion set to
the library.
Damage to the communion service was
said to have occurred when the church was partially wrecked in
the Great Storm of September 8, 1900.
Photo Caption:
Six piece pewter communion service from St.
Paul German Presbyterian Church,
Galveston.
Made by Adams Chandler & Co. and
Adams Hallock & Co., 1871. |