St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral (Tarpon Springs, Florida)
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St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral is a Greek Orthodox parish and Greek-American cultural center in Tarpon Springs, Florida. Its Neo-Byzantine church is located at 36 North Pinellas Avenue.[1]
St. Nicholas hosts an annual Epiphany celebration on January 6, in which Greek Orthodox boys aged 16 to 18 dive into Spring Bayou to retrieve a white wooden cross, said to bring the finder blessings for the year. It is the largest such event in the Western Hemisphere, with thousands in attendance.[1] A statue of an epiphany diver is located in front of the church.[2]
Architecture
editThe domed main church building, designed by the Eugene Brothers of Chicago, was completed in 1943. Modeled in part after the Hagia Sophia in what is now Istanbul, Turkey, it combines Byzantine and Gothic Revival styles.[3] It is a local landmark which has been featured on postcards.[4][5]
Noted features of the cathedral include 23 stained glass windows surrounding the dome depicting episodes in the life of Jesus and the saints, hand-painted by Joseph V. Llorens of Atlanta, and the 60-ton altar, made of Pentelic marble. Within the dome are three large chandeliers from Czechoslovakia. The altar was originally part of the Greek exhibit at the 1939 New York World's Fair.[6] It, along with the cathedra, choir stalls, and other components were obtained with help from George Frantzis.[7] A new altar of Carrara marble was installed in 1965.
The interior is richly decorated with icons, many by Greek iconographer George Saclaridis. 41 icons, sponsored by various members of the parish, were delivered in 1952, with more added in subsequent years. On December 4, 1969, the icon of Saint Nicholas was observed to have drops of moisture, and some consider it a weeping Icon.[8]
History
editThe community traces its history to John Cocoris, a native of Leonidio in Arcadia, Greece, who settled in the area in 1896 and became a prosperous sponge diver and trader.[9] The trade attracted Greek immigrants as well as Greeks from other parts of the U.S. By 1907, the population was large enough to support a Greek Orthodox church, a project put under the supervision of Nicholas Peppas, a native of Aegina. The first church, completed that year at a cost of $300 for the land and $3,500 for construction ($10,027 and $116,980 when adjusted for inflation respectively),[10][11] was a wood frame structure painted white. Rev. Stamatis Koutouzis was appointed the first parish priest.[9] The parish added a school in 1925.
By 1935, the parish had outgrown the first church and began raising funds toward the current structure. Construction began in 1941 and was completed in 1943, when it was consecrated by Archbishop Athenagoras (later the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople) at Epiphany.[3] St. Nicholas was by then a significant center of community life, with major festivals surrounding Epiphany, Greek Independence Day and Orthodox Easter. Honoring this, in 1975, the Tarpon Springs Board of Commissioners passed a resolution designating the city the "Epiphany City" of the United States. St. Nicholas was elevated to cathedral status for West Florida in January 1979.[3]
In January 2006, His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, the primus inter pares of the Eastern Orthodox Church, came to St. Nicholas to preside over the Centennial Epiphany service and to throw the cross during the dive.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Stewart, Ayana (January 5, 2016), "Tarpon Springs gets ready for Epiphany", Tampa Bay Times
- ^ "Epiphany, Tarpon Springs", Local Legacies, Library of Congress, retrieved April 27, 2018
- ^ a b c "A New Era", Parish History, St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral, retrieved April 27, 2018
- ^ "St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church – Tarpon Springs, Florida", Florida Memory, State Library and Archives of Florida, retrieved April 27, 2018
- ^ "WhatWasThere | Explore Photos".
- ^ Tarpon Springs: Sponge Capital of America, Florida History Internet Center
- ^ History of Epiphany Celebration
- ^ Spiritual Florida; A Guide to retreat centers page 56
- ^ a b "The Beginning", Parish History, St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral, retrieved April 27, 2018
- ^ "$300 in 1907 → 2024 | Inflation Calculator". www.in2013dollars.com. Retrieved 2024-07-22.
- ^ "$3,500 in 1907 → 2024 | Inflation Calculator". www.in2013dollars.com. Retrieved 2024-07-22.