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Santa Fé, New Mexico’s “Miraculous Staircase” by Kaye Spencer

At the end of the Old Santa Fe Trail stands the Loretto Chapel. Inside the Gothic structure is the staircase referred to as miraculous, inexplicable, marvelous and is sometimes called St. Joseph’s Staircase. The stairway confounds architects, engineers and master craftsmen. It makes over two complete 360-degree turns, stands 20’ tall and has no center support. It rests solely on its base and against the choir loft. The risers of the 33 steps are all of the same height. Made of an apparently extinct wood species, it was constructed with only square wooden pegs without glue or nails… (http://www.lorettochapel.com/history.html)



 
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:
  1. Who built the staircase?
  2. How is its construction possible?
  


Miraculous Staircase


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
1852
  • 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
1853 - 1873
  • 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
1876
  • 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
1878
  • 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
Choir loft at the back of Loretto Chapel

Choir loft at the back of Loretto Chapel

[1877-1881]
  • Staircase is built – without a railing

Picture of a picture of the staircase without rails
1887
  • Staircase railing is added
Close-up of staircase railing
1880s & 1890s
  • Chapel undergoes additions, renovations, such as the introduction of the Stations of the Cross, Gothic altar, frescoes
Front/Altar of Loretto Chapel
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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