Trinity Church, ca. 1979.
Constructed at the foot of Wall Street in 1698, the first Trinity Church faced the Hudson River. Captain William Kidd, later a notorious pirate, lent tackle from his ship to hoist stones to build the church. This Church burned in the Great Fire of 1776, which burned one third of the City just after British forces occupied it and was blamed by the British on revolutionary arsonists.
The Second Trinity Church was completed in 1790; this time the Church faced Wall Street. At that time, New York was the U.S. Capital, and George Washington frequently worshiped at Trinity Church. Other notable parishioners included Alexander Hamilton and John Jay. Severe winters in the late 1830’s damaged the Church. Trinity gave Architect Richard Upjohn his first New York church commission for repair work. Trinity and Upjohn eventually decided to tear down the existing church and build the third Trinity Church in a Gothic Revival style designed to resemble a 14th century English parish church. The Church was consecrated in 1846. With its 281-foot-high steeple, Trinity Church dominated the Manhattan skyline until the towers of the Brooklyn Bridge rose 50 years later. Trinity Churchyard, adjacent to the church, is the burial place of many famous New Yorkers including Alexander Hamilton, Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton and her sister, Angelica Schuyler Church, and Robert Fulton.
Trinity was the first Anglican Church on Manhattan, and, in 1705, Queen Anne granted 215 acres of land to support the church. Consisting of the land West of Broadway from Fulton to Reade Street and a strip along the Hudson from Duane to Christopher Streets and known first as “Kings Farm” and later as “Church Farm,” the land was first used for agriculture from which the Church paid its annual rent of 60 bushels of wheat. Over the years, Trinity developed the land and sold or gave away most of the original tract, but today retains 14 acres on which sits 5.5 million square feet of commercial real estate worth over $2 billion. This makes Trinity Church one of the largest landowners in Manhattan, and the recipient of a large income used for church operations, care of its historic buildings, and its philanthropic mission.