For 60 years, St. Philip's Church, an African American mission of the Episcopal Church, stood at 209 Almond St., an important site at the edge of the African American and Jewish neighborhoods that comprised Syracuse's 15th Ward.
The church closed its doors in 1957, and the Rev. Walter Welsh, rector of Grace Episcopal Church, located at 819 Madison St., welcomed members of the St. Philip's congregation with open arms. Grace Church, founded in 1871, has traveled a path of commitment to community and social justice since its inception. Welcoming the members of St. Philip's further broadened the church's diverse congregation and commitment to inclusion. "This extraordinary act of inclusion during some of the most difficult days of America's racial segregation initiated a commitment to inclusion and diversity at Grace Episcopal Church, a tradition that continues today," says the Rev. Jennifer Baskerville-Burrows, rector of Grace Church and Episcopal chaplain at Syracuse University's Hendricks Chapel.
To mark the 110th anniversary of St. Philip's founding and 50th anniversary of its closing, Grace Church has planned a yearlong series of events to commemorate the life of St. Philip's; to celebrate the creation of the interracial Grace congregation; and to facilitate a community-wide and interfaith dialogue on race and reconciliation. That dialogue, the Walter Welsh Forum on Racial Reconciliation, will be held on Saturday, April 28, from 2-4 p.m. in Hendricks Chapel. The event is free and open to the public; free parking will be available in the Quad 1 lot behind Hendricks Chapel.
The forum is sponsored by Grace Church; the Episcopal Diocese of Central New York; Hendricks Chapel; the Department of Communication and Rhetorical Studies in SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts; SU's Division of Student Affairs; the Central New York Community Foundation; the Gifford Foundation and the Cultural Resources Council of Central New York/New York State Council on the Arts.
Forum participants will include:
Kendall Phillips, associate professor of communication and rhetorical studies in VPA and a member of Grace Church, is one of the event organizers. For the past six years, his students have been engaged in a "public memory project," in which they have focused on how our memories of the past impact our current political and cultural lives. "The legacy of St. Philip's fits in well with the larger memory of the displacement of the 15th Ward and the changes in the city caused by the construction of Interstate 81," Phillips says. "These memories are clearly wrapped up in our present attitudes toward race relations in the city."
Phillips is also involved as a member of Grace Church. "We continue to live in a world where race is used to divide people," he says. "One of the wonderful legacies from the merger of St. Philip's and Grace is that we have this amazing multicultural and multi-racial community, which can serve as an object lesson for today's society.
On Sunday, April 29, Battle will give "A Talk on Racial Reconciliation" from 9-10:15 a.m. at Grace Church, sponsored by the Episcopal Diocese of CNY. Battle will also preach at the church's 8 and 10:30 a.m. services.
The forum and talk are part of a yearlong schedule of events to mark the 50th anniversary of the closing of St. Philip's. Canon Ed Rodman of the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass., spoke in Syracuse in January. Other scheduled events include a Youth Anti-Racism Day in September and a St. Philip's Homecoming Celebration Oct. 27-28.