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| Our History
At the start of the twentieth century, the Wisconsin Synod of the Presbyterian Church began hearing concerns that with the rise of public, land-grant universities, students were being drawn away from church-sponsored institutions and were losing their religious connections when they left home to pursue their education. A "Presbyterian Student Union for mutual acquaintance and spiritual culture" was organized, and Pastor George E. Hunt of Christ Presbyterian Church in Madison received permission to hire a staff person to serve college students. In 1907 Matthew C. Allison, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Bloomington, Indiana, accepted the call to begin working with students at the University of Wisconsin. 1907 - 1920 Pioneering Years In 1912 the Wisconsin Synod, with the help of the College Board (a unit of the Presbyterian Church’s General Assembly), assumed the full support of the university pastor. In 1914, Christ Presbyterian Church burned and the United States entered the First World War, two events that prompted the idea of finding space near the campus to house a student ministry. At a Synod meeting in late 1918, members recognized that a "university mission [would] have to be housed near the campus." In 1920 a land contract was signed for property on the corner of State and Murray Streets. 1921 - 1930 Fundraising for a Vision Although slowed by the Great Depression when numerous donors reneged on their pledges, the fundraising ultimately proved successful—first to pay off the land contract and then to provide for a needed chapel and "clubhouse." The Wisconsin Synod created a new corporation known as "The Presbyterian Student Center Foundation" with the mission of managing both the ministry and the building program. 1931 - 1940 A New Kind of Church 1941 - 1960 War Abroad and Return of the Veterans In addition to its vibrant worshipping community Pres House was also a gathering place where students came to socialize, sing, and study. Choir practices, card games, parties, concerts, and colloquia took place in the chapel and in the lounges. The building was full and busy every day of the week. A number of students also lived in the rooms at Pres House. Called ROOJAHs (the Royal Order of Janitors and Hosts), these residents cared for the building in exchange for board. They cleared the sidewalks in winter, mopped floors, cleaned bathrooms, and shoveled coal into the boiler, among other tasks. Pres House became not just a meeting place but an actual church with student elders, trustees, and deacons. Officers’ training programs were refined to put practical power and serious work into the hands of students. Deacons were appointed to handle hospital calling, student welfare services, fellowship activities, projects, and suppers. Student elders of Pres House attended and participated in Presbytery and General Assembly meetings. Although the building at 731 State Street officially became "University Presbyterian Church," it never lost its "Pres House" nickname or its sense of history. The Presbyterian ministry was able to provide a vital church experience that was directly related to the needs and concerns of Christian and non-Christian students alike across the university campus. 1960 - 1969 Another War and Toward Ecumenicism By the middle 1960s, with civil rights protests and the Vietnam War occupying the hearts and minds of students, violence increased on campus, and lower State Street became an area of unrest. Many university students became involved in the protests to one degree or another, and at the height of the anti-war demonstrations, Pres House served both as an escape from tear gas and turmoil and as a center for discussions on faith and politics, society and institutions. Pressures for ecumenical work in Madison increased. Mainline campus ministries requested more funding at the same time that denominational funds for missions began to decrease. Two services continued each Sunday in the chapel throughout the mid-1960s, but by the end of the decade, many students had become disillusioned with institutions, including the church, and were focusing their efforts elsewhere. Membership declined, and in 1969 the Presbyterian Synod dissolved what had been a unique university congregation. 1970 - 1999 Madison Campus Ministry A number of campus pastors were employed during this period and active ministry took place at Pres House, primarily in the form of counseling, service projects, education, and spiritual formation, but in some years also including a small mid-week and Sunday worship service. In 1983 a Christian Reformed congregation began to rent space both for offices and for worship in the chapel on Sundays. A Christian coffee house called the "Catacombs" was organized and run by students on the lower level where music, food, and cultural events were offered to the campus community. The function of Pres House as it approached the end of the 1990s could be characterized as largely that of hospitality—renting space to various Christian and nonprofit organizations, hosting weddings, parties, concerts, and receptions. In 1999 the Presbyterian Synod announced its intention to sell the property, but with committed students, pastors, local church members and others defending the need to retain Pres House for campus ministry, Synod officials relented. 2000 - 2007 Renewal Renovation work has begun on the neo-Gothic landmark structure on Library Mall, and a seven-story student apartment building is rising on the adjacent lot. The Pres House Residence offers students a place to live where they can enjoy healthy academic and social lives as well as participate in programming that allows for spiritual exploration. An underground passageway offers access to worship opportunities in the chapel as well as to a restaurant and coffee shop in remodeled space on the State Street end of the building. Beyond 2007 |
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