There have been four Roman Catholic cathedrals in St. Paul. The first three were built between 1841 and 1858. The fourth, and the most architecturally distinctive, opened in 1915. Since then, no building in the Twin Cities has approached it in ambition or magnificence.
The massive granite cathedral at the foot of Summit and Selby Avenues is the fourth in the history of the archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. The first was Father Lucien Galtier’s log-cabin Chapel of St. Paul, elevated to the status of cathedral with the 1851 arrival of Bishop Joseph Cretin. A three-floor brick building succeeded it later in 1851; a bigger one in stone followed in 1856. Both stood in downtown St. Paul.
Between 1850 and 1900 St. Paul grew from a village to a city of over 160,000. Many of the new citizens were Roman Catholics, mostly of German and Irish origin. In 1904 Archbishop John Ireland (1838–1918), a potato-famine Irish immigrant and a protégé of Joseph Cretin’s, decided to build yet another cathedral.
Ireland hired French architect Emmanuel Masqueray (1861–1917). Together they conceived a building with a grandeur rivaled only by Cass Gilbert’s state capitol, completed in 1905.
The commanding site they chose sits on the edge of a bluff then called St. Anthony Hill. In a biblical context, it can be seen as permitting the House of God to look down, literally and symbolically, on moneychangers (as represented by downtown St. Paul) and Caesar (as represented by the state capitol).
Construction began in 1906. The building opened, undecorated inside, in 1915. Masqueray died in 1917, Ireland a year later. The Boston firm of Maginnis and Walsh was hired in 1923 to complete the interior, a project that went on until 1940.
The exterior is Rockville (Minnesota) granite topped by a copper dome 306 feet from the ground at its apex. Above the main, east-facing entry, a relief sculpture of Christ sending his apostles out to preach to the world reaches to the peak. It is flanked by statues of St. Peter and St. Paul designed by Leon Hermant of Chicago and carved by John Garratti of St. Paul. Its overall appearance is severe; the granite is gray, the dome’s copper oxidized to a cocoa brown.
The interior, by contrast, abounds in color—marble, metalwork, stained glass, and painting. There are at least twenty-five varieties of marble on display from nine countries. Their colors range from radiant red (Rojo Alicante from Spain in the Sacred Heart Chapel) to deep green (Tinos from Greece in the vestibules) to a black flecked with gold (Portora from Italy in the baldachin columns.)
The bronze screen behind the altar is worked in figures and patterns. All of the eleven chapels feature stained glass windows. Three enormous rose windows brighten the sanctuary; one of them portrays North American martyrs and North Woods wildlife. The rose windows are by Charles Connick, the grilles by Albert Atkins, and the altar and baldachin (altar cover) by Whitney Warren.
An unusual feature of the cathedral is the Shrine of Nations: six chapels arrayed in a semicircle behind the altar, installed 1926–1928. These commemorate ethnic groups that contributed labor and money to the Cathedral project: Irish, French Canadian, Italian, German, and Slavic. A sixth, of St. Therese, represents other ethnic groups in general. Each contains a central statue of a patron saint, two flanking stained glass windows, and, in the floor, a circular slab of marble from the country.
There are two large frescos by Mark Balma. One shows Bishop Cretin arriving by canoe in 1851, with the Chapel of St. Paul in the background. The other portrays Archbishop Ireland about to enter the cathedral for its first mass in spring of 1915.
At each of the four corners of the main seating area stands a bigger-than-life statue of one of the four evangelists. The interior space is vast beneath the high dome. The main dome and the high ceiling over the altar are both highly decorated, adding to the variety of color and setting off the soft glow of the Mankato travertine walls and columns.
A major renovation took place between 2001 and 2003. Workers repaired the exterior and completely re-sheathed the copper dome.
Cain, Sr. Joan, and Paul Nelson. Rocky Roots, Geology and Stone Construction in Downtown St. Paul. St. Paul: Ramsey County Historical Society, 2004.
Durkin, Sister Mary Cabrini, ed. Cathedral of St. Paul, Living Mission of the Church. Strasbourg, France: Editions du Signe, 1998.
Hansen, Eric C. Cathedral of Saint Paul, an Architectural Biography. St. Paul: Cathedral of St. Paul, 1990.
Millet, Larry. AIA Guide to the Twin Cities: the Essential Source on the Architecture of Minneapolis and St. Paul. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 2007.
Observing the overflow crowds at the third cathedral (at Sixth and St. Peter Streets, and then fifty-one years old) in 1904, Archbishop John Ireland decides that a new cathedral must be built.
A log cabin overlooking the Mississippi near what will become Kellogg Boulevard and Wabasha Street is consecrated on November 1 as the Chapel of St. Paul. The building is so named by Father Lucien Galtier, the first Roman Catholic priest in Minnesota.
The chapel becomes Minnesota’s first cathedral when its first bishop, Father Joseph Cretin, arrives in St. Paul.
St. Paul’s second cathedral, a three-story building at Fifth and Wabasha Streets, is completed. It includes a church, living quarters for the bishop and priests, and a school.
The cornerstone is laid for a third cathedral at Sixth and St. Peter Streets. Due to the Financial Panic of 1857, its original grand design is never completed.
Archbishop John Ireland decides that a fourth cathedral must be built to accommodate St. Paul’s growing Catholic population.
St. Paul businessman Charles H. F. Smith acquires the Kittson mansion for $52,000 and conveys it to the archdiocese.
Emmanuel Masqueray is chosen as the new cathedral’s architect.
Masqueray estimates the cost, minus interior decoration, at $1 million.
Work on the building begins.
On June 2, the cornerstone is laid for the fourth Cathedral of St. Paul.
The exterior of the cathedral is completed on May 18.
Archbishop Ireland celebrates the first mass at the nearly completed cathedral on March 28.
On May 26, Masqueray collapses in a streetcar on his way to work and dies a short time later at age fifty-five.
On September 25, Archbishop Ireland dies at age eighty.
Interior decorations are completed. The total cost of the building comes to $1,600,000.
An exterior renovation is completed.