Old Presby Days For June 22, 2008 to June 21, 2009
                       
Celebrating 140th Anniversary of First Presbyterian Church, Santa Barbara

Featuring:   Brief Overview

The celebration of the 140th Anniversary of the founding of the First Presbyterian Church in Santa Barbara is planned for the coming year.  We’re starting now, in June 2008, and will continue until the 140th Anniversary on June 21, 2009.  We will divide the events by recognizing each of eight historic eras.  We’ll introduce you to the many pastors and people who have led our congregation, portray for you the four sanctuary locations that we’ve had, and review some of the myriad of organizational activities that have taken place. 

On June 21 in 1869 in the adobe County Court House, 19 charter members were received into the First Presbyterian Church by The Reverend Thomas Fraser, the Presbyterian Synodical Missionary for the Pacific Coast.  These first members were seeking worship and learning experiences in keeping with their reformed Presbyterian faith.  A young seminarian, Rev. H. H. Dobbins, served the first two years, followed by eleven temporary pastors.  The first installed pastor was Rev. Dr. Augustus Carrier in 1886. 

This first era was when American settlers were arriving from the eastern part of the United States and developing homes, farms, businesses, and professions in the small, but growing 2,000 population community.  The Gold Rush had run its course and the Civil War was over.  As the congregation grew, the homes and meeting places were inadequate, so just two years after the founding, in 1871, they built and moved into their own first house of worship on the corner of De la Vina and Ortega Streets.  This too proved to be inadequate, and in 1875 the congregation marched to a new 400-seat church on State Street, on the west side of the 1200 block.  It was a significant landmark with a 130 foot steeple that was a reference point for sailors at sea and surveyors on the land.  In 1887 First Church helped found the El Montecito Presbyterian Church to serve those in the eastern part of our community.  

The second era was when the city and country were going through a boom & bust economic period, but the church continued its growth and services to the congregation.  The railroad had just arrived as had electricity, and the era was marked by the coming of the auto and the airplane.  Our next great pastor was Rev. Dr. Warren More in 1901, and the membership grew to 550.  During this era Santa Barbara became a vacation destination for the wealthy, using the railroad as the means of travel.  Hotels, resorts, hot springs and health facilities mushroomed as did large estates and farms.

During the First World War era, the congregation reached out to those in the service, and the Women’s Missionary Society was organized.  Again the church edifice proved unable to handle the increasing congregation so a new larger sanctuary was built on Anapamu Street, one-half block east of State St.; the congregation marched to the new church in 1918.  Dr Clarence Spaulding began his ministry in 1919.  “The Roaring Twenties” continued the population increases and the membership grew to 1,000 and 800 in the Church School.   

An era of disasters began in 1925 with the Earthquake which damaged the church so the congregation met in the Alameda Parks and elsewhere until it was repaired.  For many members the Great Depression began in 1929 with economic hardship, but the church served their needs.  Rev. Dr Robert McLean was called in 1932, and the McLean Chapel with its stained glass windows was built in 1940 as a memorial to his wife.  The first regular meetings of The Mariners Club for married couples were held that same year.

The next era we’ll celebrate was World War II, which began after the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941.  Santa Barbara contributed in many ways, including a Marine Air Station in Goleta and an Army Hospital at Hoff Heights; 21 members served in the armed forces.  The next minister to be called was Rev. Dr Joseph Ewing in 1943, and he helped organize the Koko Club for young unmarried singles.

The 1950’s brought a population boom era with UCSB moving to Goleta, the airport opening and Cachuma Dam being built.  The church added a Christian Education building on the corner of Anacapa and Anapamu Streets in 1951.  Rev. Dr Lawrence Fisher was called in 1956, and the congregation grew to over 2,000 and the Church School to over 1,000.  With the urbanization of the Goleta Valley, First Church helped organize two new congregations in 1959 – St Andrews in the Hope Ranch area and Goleta Presbyterian Church. 

The old Church building on Anapamu was no longer earthquake safe and the City wanted the parking lot, so a 4.3 acre site was purchased on the corner of State and Constance Streets in 1966.  The space age was starting and this started our era of modernization under the leadership of Dr. Fisher.  The new buildings for the Church School and Church Office were finished in 1971, and the congregation marched up State Street to the new 800-seat sanctuary in 1973 with its stained glass windows, new organ, and ample parking.  The Rev. Robert Pryor was called in 1981 with the Infant Day Care Center completed in 1983. 

Our last era, titled global outlook, represents outreaches by the congregation: to open a preschool children’s center, to contribute to the homeless care and feeding locally, and to increased interest and giving to international missions.  The building program was completed in 1999 with the Christian Fellowship Center and the Memorial Chapel.  Our global concern was heightened with the terrorist attach on New York on 9/11, 2001, and the subsequent wars in Afganistan and Iraq.  The congregation called Rev. Peter Buehler in 2002, and it is continuing to seek out those in need, find how to serve them, and to respond in Jesus name.

Sources:

Fisher, L E Rev, “An Incomplete History of the Presbyterian Church, Santa Barbara,” 1980

Nelson, Julie, “A Tribute to All Our Pastors,” 125th Anniv Celb, 1993

Reynolds, Junemarie & Virginia Chennell, “Our History,” updated 7/02, from www.fpcsb.org.

Watson, J David, “A Brief History of First Presbyterian Church, Santa Barbara,” Nov 1987

“Church History,” Church Directory, First Presb. Church, S. B. 2006.

“Religion: First Presbyterian opens doors in history period” by Bob Barker, feature article in S B
News-Press, Jun 25, 1994.

Funeral Arrangements “Rev Dr Lawrence E. Fisher,” S B News-Press, Feb 26, 1994.

List of Ministers from Minutes of Session, Herb Linville, Clerk of Session.

Casavant Organ Description, Patio News, First Presb Church, Oct 1993, pg 2.

“The Presbyterian Heritage Banners,” by Rev Richard Avery & D S Marsh, 1944.

“Christ Risen Window & Celtic Cross” Brochure, First Presb Church, S B, Jun 1979.

Morrison, et al, “Concise History of the American Republic,” Oxford Univ Press, 1977.

Spaulding, Edward S, “Story of Santa Barbara,” Pacific Coast Publ, 1964.

Storke, T M. & W A Tompkins, “California Editor,” S B News-Press, 1958.

Tompkins, W A, “California’s Wonderful Corner,” 1962.

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