Visitors to the soaring edifice of Grace Cathedral will have difficulty envisioning
its humble parish ancestor of a century-and-a-half ago. The setting was
rough-and-tumble Gold Rush San Francisco. Little clapboard and shingle
Grace Chapel, built on muddy Powell Street near Jackson Street, opened
December 30, 1849, just feet away from its predecessor, Holy Trinity Church.

Grace Chapel
1849-1851
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The proximity of the two buildings symbolizes the tangled roots of the Episcopal Church in
San Francisco. Belgian-born Dr. John L. Ver Mehr, first priest appointed to
the city by the Board of Missions in New York, was subsequently "given the run
around" by the Board, who instead sent Dr. Flavel Mines. Ver Mehr persisted,
despite a serious bout of smallpox, and was given free passage to San Francisco
by a sympathetic captain.
Mines and Ver Mehr became good friends, recognizing the challenges of the West's vast
missionary field. Before his chapel's opening service, Ver Mehr wrote that he
"peeped through the canvas partition. Sturdy miners came in and took their seats
on the rough planks, taking up their prayer-books and evidently in earnest.
Others came. A few ladies, very few." At the offertory, "I had nothing but gold
to offer at the altar."
Grace Church was organized the next year, and in 1851 a larger wooden church was built.
Debt lingered over the fledgling parish. Robbery, a cholera epidemic, and a
city fire that singed the tower were other problems, but the parish survived.
A sacred concert, the city's first, helped raise money for the parish. Bishop
William I. Kip, first Missionary Bishop of California, arrived in 1854 and took
over as rector. Before his first service he was told, "There are twenty people
inside and the sheriff at the door."
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Bishop William I. Kip
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The dynamic and eloquent Revered Ferdinand C. Ewer succeeded Bishop Kip in 1857, and the
congregation quickly grew. Author Richard Henry Dana commented on the prosperity
of the church in 1859. The next year, Bishop Kip laid the cornerstone for a
new and more substantial church building at Stockton and California Streets,
part way up what would soon be called "Nob Hill". Consecrated in 1862, the stately
brick Gothic church was unofficially dubbed Grace "Cathedral", as Bishop Kip
had returned as rector. Although this was the second use of the title by an
American Episcopal church, and was dropped after 1867, the title proved to be
prophetic.

Reverend James S. Bush
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Bishop Kip's departure as rector in 1864 led to a long search for a permanent rector,
satirized by local newspaper columnist Mark Twain. Short term rectors included
the Reverend Hannibal Goodwin, inventor of photographic film, and the Reverend
James S. Bush, great-great-grandfather of President George W. Bush.
Grace Church became a fashionable parish as Nob Hill's mansions rose up-slope in the
1870s. The parish vestry boasted some of the leading families of San Francisco;
Tevis, Haggin, Bancroft, Stanford, Gibbs, Crocker, Gwin. Society weddings (Alexander/Crocker)
and funerals (Sharon, Hearst) drew crowds of spectators up the hill.
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1906 ruins
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The Reverend William Platt and his successor, the Reverend Robert C. Foute, presided over
those prosperous years. By 1893 the new diocesan, Bishop William F. Nichols,
was a frequent presence, and began to envision a diocesan cathedral. The great
pre-dawn earthquake of April 18, 1906, caused only minor damage to the iron-framed
church, but a relentless city-wide fire swept across Nob Hill that night, destroying
everything. The last rector, Reverend David Evans, managed to save several parish
registers and a communion plate, wheeling them, and his child, down California
Street in a baby carriage. The noble shell of the "Old Warder of the Hill" became
a dramatic subject for photographers, until its demolition months later.
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