ASUMC Historic Timeline

1862

Arch Street UMC is establish. A room is rented on the second floor of the German-American Trust Company at the Northeast corner of Broad and Arch Streets. Founding members Charles W. Higgins, George Cookman, and James R. White can be seen to the left.

February

Rev. Arron Rittenhouse (right) is the first pastor appointed to serve Arch Street UMC

1864

April
A lot is purchased at the corner of Arch and Broad Streets and architect Addison Hutton is engaged to design the Chapel leaving room for a larger sanctuary.
July 7th 1864

The cornerstone of the chapel was laid in a ceremony with distinguished guests including Bishop Matthew Simpson (pictured below) and Levi Scott.

 
Fun Fact

To the left you can see a depiction of the lot at 55 N broad street that would become the home of Arch Street UMC. Before the purchase this lot contained a coal yard and a seller of cemetery markers.

1865

April

After his assassination on April 15th, Lincoln’s funeral procession passed the unfinished chapel on its way to Independence Hall where it lay in state for a day. Bishop Matthew Simpson, who helped found and build ASUMC, was an advisor to Lincoln advocating for the freeing of all slaves and gave the final address at Lincoln’s funeral.

June
ME Conference approved the idea for a retirement house for older Methodists. This first house held 25 residents. This mission grew exponentially over the years and moved into larger facilities (shown later)

1869

Ulysses S. Grant and his wife, Julia Grant, visited Arch Street UMC to attend the wedding of Hannah Simpson, daughter to Bishop Simpson. 

1870

November 

The new sanctuary, also designed by architect Addison Hutton, is completed.

Above the sanctuary is a hung plaster ceiling with a large open space between it and the roof which draws hot air up and out of the sanctuary. Arch Street UMC was one of the first buildings to use this induced airflow method to cool the interior in summer.

1871

May

A Standbridge organ has 17 registers with 1,008 pipes in the great organ, 9 registers and 489 pipes in the choir organ, 14 registers and 709 pipes in the swell organ, and 4 registers and 116 pipes in the pedal organ, with 7 additional couplers and mechanical stops for a total of 51 registers and 2,322 pipes.

1888

June 

Arch Street accepted the deed to the land at 53rd and Chestnut Streets to start a new congregation eventually becoming St. Matthews

1883

November 4th 

Arthur M. Burton, a member and trustee of Arch Street, founded St. Luke’s Methodist Episcopal Church at Broad and Jackson Streets in South Philadelphia.

1899

An even larger facility was built for Simpson House near Belmont Plateau which remains in operation to this day and is America’s oldest retirement community.

Fun Fact!

The baptismal picture here is made of wood from the once three-tiered pulpit at City Road Chapel in London. This church was founded by John Wesley and originally built in 1777.

This historic baptismal is still used at Arch Street UMC services today!

1914

Electricity was installed in the church

1971

December 

Duke Ellington and his orchestra performed a sacred concert at the church

1990s


Installed handicap accessible bathroom for use of unhoused/unsheltered people

2006

Church became a reconciling congregation affirming LGBTQ+ individuals as full members of the church

September

Worked with nation fund for sacred spaces to complete a master plan for the churches restoration

2009

Completed restoration of sanctuaries stain glass window

2019

Hosted organizing meeting for Occupy Philly

 

Took over programing and responsibility for Serenity House to maintain a United Methodist presence in north Philadelphia

2012 

Founding member of Power, an interfaith organization committed to radical and economic justice on a liveable planet. 

2016

Partnered with Nurses to form a wellness space for our unhouse and unsheltered neighbors

ASUMC becomes a Sanctuary congregation welcoming Javier Flores into our space as he sought approval of his U-Visa application.

2018

The Center-Philadelphia became it’s own 501C3 born out of the many outreach ministries at Arch Street UMC

2020

The Center opens a drop-in center providing showers, laundry, case management, a clothing closet, meals, and more to our unhoused and unsheltered neighbors