Church of the Good Shepherd, Pawtucket


University of Rhode Island, University Archives and Special Collections
15 Lippitt Road
Kingston, RI 02881-2011
Tel: 401-874-4632

email: archives@etal.uri.edu

Published in 2007

Collection Overview

Title: Church of the Good Shepherd, Pawtucket
Date range: 1872-1985
Creator: Church of the Good Shepherd (Pawtucket, R.I.)
Extent: 5.5 box(es)
(4.75 linear feet)
Abstract: The records of the Church of the Good Shepherd document its church vestry meetings and annual congregation meetings from 1874 to 1985, and meetings of the Episcopal Church Women from 1965 to 1974. The Registers list church services for the years 1939 to 1973, with an indexed listing of its communicants, marriages, baptisms, burials, including the Sunday School Registry, which lists students in attendance from 1874 to 1917. The records are complete for every year from 1872 to 1974, except for the baptism records from 1968.
Language of materials: English
Repository: University of Rhode Island, University Archives and Special Collections
Collection number: Mss. Gr. 197

Scope & content

The records of the Church of the Good Shepherd contain church vestry meetings and annual congregation meetings from 1874 to 1985; meetings of the Episcopal Church Women
from 1965 to 1974, historical sketchs of the church, and the Sunday School Registry, which lists students in attendance from 1874 to 1917.

The Registers list church services for the years 1939 to 1973, with an indexed listing of its communicants, marriages, baptisms and burials. The records for every year from 1872 to 1974 are included in this collection, except for the baptism records from 1968, which are incomplete.

Arrangement

The collection is arranged into three series as follows;

  • 1. Vestry Meetings, 1874-1985
  • 2. Church Registers, 1872-1974
  • 3. Subject Files, 1874-1974

Historical Information

The Church of the Good Shepherd
was established in
Pawtucket, Rhode Island in 1868 in a former volunteer firehouse on Carnation Street. It was begun primarily to serve as a Sunday school, services followed after school for the benefit of students, teachers and the elderly. The school was founded on November 1, 1868 with eighteen students on its opening day by Silas H. Woodcock, Frederic Merris, Rebecca Yates, and Rev. Storrs O. Seymour, the rector of Trinity Church
. Over the course of the next year, a parish library was established and the population of the school increased to nine teachers and sixty students. Wednesday evening services were added beginning on February 10, 1869. The attendance at the school and services continued to increase over the next year, and it was felt that a chapel was needed in order for the parish to expand further. To serve this purpose, a lot on the corner of Broadway and Woodbine Streets was purchased in 1869-1870 from parishioner Martha Sidebottom.

Ground was broken for the chapel on March 9, 1872. The first baptism in the new chapel, a small plain building with heavy benches instead of pews, took place on the day of the opening service, June 23, 1872. The chapel was under the direction of Rev. Seymour until mid 1872 when Rev. George A. Coggshall took over missionary duties from Rev. Storrs O. Seymour. Coggshall left the parish in 1874 and later converted to Roman Catholicism. Following Coggshall, Rev. Benjamin Eastwood became rector in 1874, on the first Sunday following Easter. At this time, regular Sunday and weekday services were established.

In September 1874, a rectory adjacent to the chapel was completed and, in addition to serving as the rector's residence, this building became the center of the church social life for a number of years, hosting such events as the Old English Shrove Tuesday pancake party. The original space in the firehouse on Carnation Street also continued to be used for church social events for several years, until it was taken over by the town of
Pawtucket to be used again as a fire station. Between 1868 and 1874, the size of the congregation expanded substantially, and in April 1875, the church was enlarged.

The first regular parish meeting was held on Monday, March 29, 1875, where the first election for church officers was held. Interestingly, one of the most prominent of the vestrymen at that meeting, Elisha Gaynor, was actually a lifelong Roman Catholic. Rev. Eastwood cultivated a close relationship with the nearby Catholic Church, the Sacred Heart, throughout his time as rector. His was a philosophy of liberality and inclusiveness that took in all of the residents of the neighborhood, and in fact, he was known as Father Eastwood to the parishioners of Sacred Heart Church
.

By the time of its consecration on June 16, 1883, 275 individuals had been baptized, 120 had been admitted to the communion, and burial service had been said over 160 people. In 1888, the church was officially incorporated into the Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island.

In the early 1890's space was rented on the upper floor of a building on the corner of Park and Japonica Streets to meet the growing need for a church hall. The rent proved to be too expensive and the following year a less expensive space in a former schoolhouse on Woodbine Street was found. With the growing number of parishioners the need for a permanent parish house was evident. The congregation worked toward this goal for many years and on January 13, 1905 a parish house was dedicated. Rev. Eastwood retired as rector, after twenty-four years in the position, on June 30, 1898, though he remained involved in the church as a pastor-emeritus until his death on January 25, 1899. A successor for Rev. Eastwood was not chosen until December 1898, when Rev. Asaph S. Wicks received the call.

A pipe organ was purchased and installed on May 26, 1913. In September 1915, the church bought the house and lot adjoining the rectory, to use as a rental property and to keep business blocks from being built next to the rectory. By the fiftieth anniversary in 1918, the church had performed 1,275 baptisms, 872 confirmations, 582 marriages, and 991 burials. The Sunday school’s current enrollment was over 300. Church organizations in 1918 included the Women's Guild
, the Girl's Friendly Society
, the Altar Guild
, and the Boy Scouts
.

Rev. Wicks retired on January 1, 1929, after exactly thirty-one years of service to the parish. He died that evening. During the latter half of the twentieth century, several major events occurred in the life of the Church of the Good Shepherd. In 1950, the rental property next to the Church on Carnation Street was sold in order to start an endowment. Between 1952 and 1954 interior and exterior improvements were made to the chapel building. In 1961, a major addition to the Parish House was also made, adding six classrooms and a new sacristy. In 1966, the church voted to allow the Blackstone Valley Community Action Program
to use several rooms in the Parish House. This program grew and in 1968, it was decided to move the program into the rectory, and purchase a new rectory for the purposes of housing the rector.

A new rectory was purchased in 1968 in
Seekonk, Massachusetts. In 1977, the original rectory adjacent to the church was demolished and replaced by a Memorial Garden. The new rectory in Seekonk was thought to be too far from the church, however, and the church sold it to Rev. Humphrey when he retired in 1978. A new rectory on Sheffield Avenue in
Pawtucket was purchased in 1979.

In 1980 the parish voted to sponsor a Cambodian refugee family, and toward this end, the church rented a five-room apartment which became the home of the ten members of the Tan family. The family has since become fully integrated members of the parish.

As a result of declining enrollment at the end of the 1970’s, the Good Shepherd forged a close relationship with St. Paul's Episcopal Church
, combining the Junior and Senior High Fellowship groups and Wednesday night Lenten services. Membership continued to decline towards the end of the twentieth century, and in July 2005 the Church of the Good Shepherd merged with the Church of the Advent
, after the latter parish closed its doors. 

Chronology of Rectors

Rev. Storrs O. Seymour (1868-1872)

Rev. George A. Coggshall (1872-1874)

Rev. Benjamin Eastwood (1874-1898)

Rev. Asaph S. Wicks (1898-1929)

Rev. Roger Alling (1931-1939)

Rev. Edwin W. Grilley (1939-1942)

Rev. Herbert Dowling (1942-1948)

Rev. W. Leighton Burgess (1948-1951)

Canon Anthony R. Parshley (1951-1963)

Rev. William Schnitzer (1963-1968)

Rev. Richard H. Humphrey (1968-1978)

Rev. Charles C. Caskey (1979-1981)

Rev. Lawrence Bradner (1981-1982)

Rev. John Combs (1982-1991?)

Access & Use

Access to the collection: Open for research.
Use of the materials: Terms governing use and reproduction: Photocopying and scanning of materials is a fee based service available in the repository and is allowed at the discretion of the Archivist when in compliance to the Unit's policy on copyright and publication.
Preferred citation: Church of the Good Shepherd, Pawtucket, Rhode Island, Mss. Gr. 197, University of Rhode Island, University Archives and Special Collections
Contact information: University of Rhode Island, University Archives and Special Collections
15 Lippitt Road
Kingston, RI 02881-2011
Tel: 401-874-4632

email: archives@etal.uri.edu

Administrative Information

ABOUT THE COLLECTION  
Acquisition: In September of 2006, the records the Church of the Good Shepherd, Pawtucket, were transferred from the site of the parish to be kept on permanent deposit in the Special Collections Unit, University of Rhode Island Library.
ABOUT THE FINDING AID  
Author: Finding aid prepared by Kate Freedman.
Encoding: Finding aid encoded by Russell M. Franks on 2007 August 7, updated by Hailie D. Posey on 2008 August 5, updated by Mark Dionne on2020 May 1
Descriptive rules: Finding aid based on Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)

Additional Information

Inventory


Inventory

Series 1. Vestry Meetings, 1874-1985
1.5 box(es)
(0.75 linear feet)

The vestry is a group of individuals elected by the members of the parish to manage the daily operation of the parish. The vestry is responsible for the administrative and financial operations of the parish, including the election of a rector, the hiring of employees, the management of real and personal property owned by the parish, and the management of the finances of the parish.

The records in this series include the minutes of all meetings of the vestry of the Church of the Good Shepherd in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, held between 1874 and 1985. All of the minutes are contained in bound volumes, except for those from 1933 to 1940, which are loose sheets.

Arrangement:

The records in this series are all of one type and are arranged chronologically.

Container Description Date
Box 1, Folder 1 Vestry and Annual Meeting
1874-1901
Box 1, Folder 2 Vestry and Annual Meeting
1901-1921
Box 1, Folder 3 Vestry and Annual Meeting (In oversize box 6)
1921-1932
Box 1, Folder 4 Vestry and Annual Meeting
1933-1940
Box 1, Folder 5 Vestry and Annual Meeting
1940-1969
Box 2, Folder 6 Vestry and Annual Meeting
1969-1985

Series 2. Church Registers, 1872-1974
3.25 box(es)
(4.25 linear feet)

The Register Series contains bound Registers of Church Services for the years 1939 to 1973 and bound Parish Registers of Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, and Burials for the years 1872 to 1974. The Registers of Church Services include the date, time, type of service number of attendees and the name of the celebrant for each service held in the parish. The volumes are arranged chronologically by the date of the service.

The Parish Registers are divided into sections by the type of service performed, i.e., baptisms, burials, confirmations, and marriages. The type of information recorded varies with the type of service. For baptisms it includes the date of the ceremony, the name and date of birth of the person baptized, the names of his/her parents, and the name of the officiating clergyman. The marriage records include the date of the ceremony, the names and ages of the betrothed, their residences, the names of their parents, and the name of the presiding clergyman. Confirmation records include the dates and names of those confirmed, and the name of the bishop performing the service. The burial records include the name of the deceased, the date of death, the cause of death, the age at death, the date of the funeral, the place of burial, and the name of the presiding clergyman.

Please Note: the Parish Register (Book 9): Confirmations for 1968 includes only an alphabetized index of names of those confirmed during this year. Pages 44-46, which included the chronological entries, have been removed.

Arrangement:

The registers are arranged alphabetically by type of register and then chronologically by the inclusive dates of each register.

Container Description Date
Box 3, Folder 7 Church Services
1939-1967
Box 3, Folder 8 Church Services
1967-1973
Box 3, Folder 9 Parish Register (Book 1): Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, Burials
1872-1887
Box 3, Folder 10 Parish Register (Book 1): Baptisms [copy]
1872-1879
Box 3, Folder 11 Parish Register (Book 2): Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, Burials
1881-1898
Box 4, Folder 12 Parish Register (Book 3): Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, Burials
1895-1908
Box 4, Folder 13 Parish Register (Book 4): Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, Burials
1908-1916
Box 4, Folder 14 Parish Register (Book 5): Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, Burials
1916-1924
Box 5, Folder 15 Parish Register (Book 6): Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, Burials
1924-1934
Box 5, Folder 16 Parish Register (Book 7): Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, Burials
1935-1946
Box 5, Folder 17 Parish Register (Book 8): Baptisms, Confirmations, Marriages, Burials
1946-1974
Box 6, Folder 18 Parish Register (Book 9): Confirmations
1968

Series 3. Subject Files, 1874-1974
0.75 box(es)
(0.75 linear feet)

The records in this series include the meeting minutes of the Episcopal Church Women
from 1965 to 1974, an historical sketch written for the occasion of the church’s 50th anniversary in 1918, and the Sunday School Registry, listing students in attendance from 1874 to 1917. The records in this series are bound, with the exception of the meeting minutes of the Episcopal Church Women, which is in loose sheets.

Arrangement:

The records in this series are arranged alphabetically by subject or type of record.

Container Description Date
Box 6, Folder 19 Episcopal Church Women
1965-1974
Box 6, Folder 20 Historical Sketch
1918
Box 6, Folder 21 Sunday School Registry
1874-1917