Within the well-preserved and quiet walls of Loretto Chapel in Santa Fé, New Mexico, is a staircase steeped in two mysteries that, for many people, have yet to be solved:
- Who built the staircase?
- How is its construction possible?
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Miraculous Staircase |
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Orb, perhaps? |
The Miraculous Staircase, as it is called, was built during a six-month period sometime between 1877 and 1881. To understand the story of the staircase, we must understand a little about the chapel’s history; the vision of its founding; the courage and determination of the people dedicated to its success; and the unwavering faith of these pioneering spirits.
Loretto Chapel’s story begins in 1853 and ends in 1971 when it became a private museum for the primary reason of preserving the Miraculous Staircase and the chapel.
Here is the truncated version of the chapel’s history from the chapel’s website:
1850
- Bishop Jean Baptisite Lamy appointed to Church in Santa Fe, New Mexico Territory
- Bishop Lamy begins letter writing plea for priests, brothers and nuns to come out and help him
- Sisters of Loretto send seven sisters from Kentucky
- Sisters leave St. Louis and travel to Independence, Mo.
- Encounter cholera epidemic, Mother Superior dies, and one nun is too ill to continue and returns
- Sisters open Academy of Our Lady of Light (Loretto)
- Few students to 300 students (girls) in a short period of time
- Tuition, donations, and from the sisters own inheritances ($30,000) fund the school and chapel
- Property is purchased, work on Loretto Chapel begins
- School facilities cover a square block with 10 buildings
- Architects from Paris design Loretto Chapel in the gothic style of King Louis IX's Sainte-Chapelle
- Stained glass is purchased in Paris, arrives by ship in New Orleans, goes by paddle boat to St. Louis, and then travels by covered wagon via Old Santa Fe Trail
- Chapel is completed
- No access the choir loft twenty-two feet above the main floor except by ladder
- Due to limited space within the chapel, there isn’t room for a staircase
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Choir loft at the back of Loretto Chapel |
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Choir loft at the back of Loretto Chapel |
[1877-1881]
- Staircase is built – without a railing
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Picture of a picture of the staircase without rails |
- Staircase railing is added
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Close-up of staircase railing |
- Chapel undergoes additions, renovations, such as the introduction of the Stations of the Cross, Gothic altar, frescoes
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Front/Altar of Loretto Chapel |
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Pre-Vatican II Confessional & staircase - Loretto Chapel |
Now, back to the mysteries of the staircase…
According to the history/legend on the Loretto Chapel website, the Miraculous Staircase is believed to have been constructed by St. Joseph, patron saint of carpenters, who answered the sisters' prayers for a solution to the access problem to the choir loft, when he arrived at the chapel with a donkey and a toolbox, and said he was looking for work. When he finished the staircase, he disappeared without payment or thanks.
Is the Miraculous Staircase a miracle, fabrication, or outright hoax? To quote a line from 'The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance'…
When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.
The 1998, made-for-television movie, The Staircase, stars Barbara Hershey as the mother superior and William Peterson as the mysterious carpenter. Yes, there's the Hollywood spin that fiddles with the *facts*; the story is a little slow, contrived, and melodramatic at times; but it’s still worth spending the 95 minutes to watch it, even if you only watch it once.
Other resources:
http://www.csicop.org/si/show/helix_to_heaven/
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/15/AR2010011501810.html
Note: I took the pictures I used in this blog post. Please feel free to copy/download/use the images as you like.
Until next time,
Kaye
Fall in love…faster, harder, deeper with Kaye Spencer romances
www.kayespencer.com
Twitter - @kayespencer
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