In
1926, The Reverend H. Randolph Moore was instituted as
chaplain of the School, serving through 1928. Again, the
services were conducted by the two archdeacons, with
occasional assistance from the two Bishops and the
Reverend C. A. Harrison, of Charleston, S.C.
In
1930, Mr. Samuel C. Usher, a devout Churchman, came as a
part-time instructor and acting chaplain. Under the
direction of Bishop Finlay, Mr. Usher, too instructions
for Holy Orders from the Reverend William Johnson,
Aiken, S.C., the Reverends A.G. B. Bennett, R. N.
Morgan, L. N. Taylor, D. D., of Columbia, SC he was
ordained to the Diaconate in 1932, and to the Priesthood
in 1934. He served as Chaplain until 1947.
All
services were conducted in the old Academic Building,
Kennerly Hall, and subsequently continued in the new
building known as Massachusetts Hall, which was erected
in 1930. The altar appointments and furnishings used for
the services were improvised until the new chapel was
consecrated in 1936 by Bishops K. G. Finlay and A. S.
Thomas, who had succeeded Bishop Guerry as Bishop of
South Carolina.
The
securing of funds with which to erect the new chapel
provides an interesting chapter in the life of the
school. In 1930, the late Major W. Bedford Moore, of
York, SC, made a speech in the Trustees meeting
concerning the need for a church building. He would
begin his speech with the following: "I will give $5,000
as the first money towards a church building if the
Diocese of Upper South Carolina will pay me an interest
on the amount until my death." The Board accepted his
offer, with the stipulation that no building under
twelve or fifteen thousand dollars should be put up if
it would not match the artistic dignity of the other new
buildings being planned for construction.
In
1933, at the annual Board meeting, Major Moore said, "I
have been amazed at the way my offer of $5,000 towards a
church building has been disregarded. Unless you do
something about it, I can take the offer down." The
offer was again accepted, and Dr. H. D. Phillips, who
later became Bishop of Southwestern Virginia, was made
chairman of the Building Committee, with Bishops Finlay
and Thomas, Mrs. Cain and Principal Joshua E. Blanton
named as members of the Ways and Means Committee for
securing additional funds for the new Church. Major
Moore and Dr. R.N. Patton, Director of the American
Church Institute for Negroes, were asked to act as
advisors to this committee.
In
September 1934, at the General Convention, which was
held at Atlantic City, New Jersey, Mrs. Cain made it
possible for Principal Blanton to speak at a luncheon
given by the Woman's Auxiliary on the need of a church
at Voorhees. After this luncheon engagement, the
National Women's Auxiliary gave ten thousand dollars to
be added to the five thousand dollars given by Major
Moore.
When
plans were drawn by Mr. S. J. Makielakiof of the
University of Virginia, the Trustee Board agreed that
approximately $17,500 would be needed to build the
Chapel.
Dr.
Patton, the director of American Church Institute for
Negroes, and Principal Blanton took singers to Detroit
and Southern Ohio; and while they were raising money for
St. Paul's, St. Augustine's and Fort Valley, they
secured $3,000 as special gifts for the Chapel building
at Voorhees. The final cost of the building was $18,500.
St.
Philip's Chapel, the name designated by the late
Archdeacon E. L. Baskerville, is considered the
showplace of the campus. When Father Usher resigned in
1947, Mr. Matthew A. Jones became the third Chaplain.
Under his direction, the Chapel grew in number and in
its outreach to the community. During the interim
between the resignation of Father Jones and the
appointment of the Reverend Lacy Grant as the fourth
Chaplain in 1956, the work of the Chapel was carried out
by visiting priests and the religious education
director, Mrs. Luta H. Robinson and Mrs. Lelia Brown
White. The Reverend Johnnie Montcrieft, Father Milton
Crum and Father Gordon Man were among the priests who
served as part-time chaplains.
Under
the leadership of Father Grant who served from 1956 to
1961, the vestry and congregation worked together to
remodel the altar and carpet of the sanctuary. In 1962,
the Reverend James Conroy Jackson became the fifth
Chaplain called to Voorhees College to continue the
ministry of the Chapel on the campus and the surrounding
communities. Aisle runners for the chancel and the nave,
a baptismal font, new altar hangings, a new chalice and
paten set, a pair of cruets and a flagon were some of
the recent items that were purchased and installed in
the Chapel.
In
October 1975, the congregation of St. Philips celebrated
its 40th Anniversary of the completion of the Chapel,
which also officially launched the building fund
Campaign for adding a new wing to the chapel. The new
addition would have consisted of a multi-purpose room,
kitchen, office space, and a meeting room at that time
costing $50,000.
The
sixth Chaplain to continue the ministry of the Chapel
and the community was the Reverend Howard K. Williams
who was installed as Chaplain and Vicar in 1938. He was
seen as a very visible minister who was very active in
the life of the College and the local community. In his
ministry, he enhanced the Christian Education Program in
the Diocese of South Carolina.
A
concluding comment that is a heartwarming salute to our
students who make use of the Chapel involved an incident
in which the cross and candlesticks were stolen from the
altar and had gone unnoticed by Father Jackson until he
instructed one of the acolytes on duty to light the
Eucharistic candles. It was then that the missing items
were noted to the distress of the Chaplain, acolytes,
and congregation alike.
In
a month's time, the immediate graduating class presented
to the Chaplain a new altar cross and a pair of
Eucharistic candles to replace the stolen items. This
beautiful gesture was a sincere manifestation of concern
to the church people and college family which the
students did to right the sacrilegious act that had been
perpetrated on the Chapel. This gift from that class
will always be reassured and remembered.