Heinz Memorial Chapel is a nondenominational chapel given by the H.J. Heinz family to the University of Pittsburgh.
Dedicated in 1938, the chapel hosts approximately 1,000 events annually including religious services, weddings, classes, lectures, concert
Late in his life and early in the twentieth century, the building known today as Heinz Memorial Chapel began in the mind of Henry J. Heinz. The first-born son of German immigrant parents, his youngest years were spent in Birmingham, now part of Pittsburgh’s South Side, before the family relocated to Sharpsburg. In looking back at his life, the man who was known as Harry in his youth felt that the moral and ethical lessons received from his mother, Anna Margaretta Heinz, profoundly shaped his adult life. With a sincere desire to influence others in the same way, Heinz inserted a provision in his will that a bequest be made to the University of Pittsburgh for a building to be built in honor of his mother. The wording of the bequest was spare, stating nothing of what the structure should look like. Only its purpose, for religious training and social activities was addressed.
Raised in the German Evangelical Protestant Church, later going with his mother to the Lutheran Church in Sharpsburg while a formal member of the Methodist Protestant Church, then joining East Liberty Presbyterian Church near the end of his life, Henry J. Heinz embodied cross-denominationalism. He was also keenly interested in education. Religious education through Sunday Schools was his main focus, but he placed high value on secular education. In fact, he was the first of the Heinz family to hold public office, long before great-grandson and namesake, the late Senator John Heinz, being elected to the Sharpsburg public school board.
A combined interest in religion and education led H. J. Heinz to have a building erected on the University’s new campus in Oakland, shortly after its 1908 relocation from its former site above the North Side. A very simple wooden structure, seemingly out of place among its neighboring masonry structures, its intent was the same as the stated purpose of the building mentioned in his bequest. Perhaps he had it built of wood because in his mind it was a temporary building, to be replaced by something more substantial later. He had no idea how temporary it would be, since it caught fire and burned to the ground about a year later. Never one to give up, H. J. Heinz had the building re-built. Both structures were simply known as the Heinz House and in spirit they were the predecessors of today’s Chapel.
Heinz Memorial Chapel, as it exists today, came about when the executors of H. J. Heinz’s estate, his two surviving sons, Howard and Clifford, their brother-in-law, John Given, joined by their sister, Irene Heinz Given, met with Chancellor John G. Bowman to discuss the bequest. The newly installed head of the University of Pittsburgh had a vision for the small private institution already formed in his mind when he met with the Heinz family delegation. It was his notion to create a “skyscraper university” that would take advantage of modern construction methods, but be cloaked in a 700 year-old architectural style that, to him, symbolized a Western European intellectual tradition that went back to the Middle Ages.
This “skyscraper university” became linked with the nickname, Cathedral of Learning, by which it is known to this day. Heinz Memorial Chapel was designed by the same Philadelphia architect, Charles Klauder, to be a companion building to it and the Stephen Foster Memorial. Groundbreaking for the Chapel was held in August 1933 and foundation work immediately began. By the following August, ninety-five percent of the limestone walls were up. This was a major building project done during the depths of the Great Depression. The Chapel was completed by the fall of 1938 and dedicated that November, being in continuous use since then.
The Heinz Memorial Chapel began as a gift. Henry John Heinz, the founder of the H.J. Heinz Company, wanted to honor his mother, Anna Margaretta Heinz, with “a building” at the University.
Mr. Heinz, who died in 1919, arranged to do that in his will. Mr. Heinz’s three surviving children added to his bequest to memorialize their grandmother and honor their father. The children were guided in their choice of a memorial by the concepts of education and religion.
Various religious services are held in the chapel, but it does not belong to any denomination. From its beginnings, the chapel was intended to be interdenominational. The chapel is open daily throughout the year except for University holidays, and hosts approximately 1,000 events annually. More than 100,000 people participate in religious services, weddings, concerts, classes, memorial services, and guided tours. Many simply seek its peace and beauty as a refuge.
Since the chapel’s dedication in 1938, the Heinz family and their philanthropies have generously provided ongoing financial support. Grants from the Vira I. Heinz and Howard Heinz Endowments and capital funds from the University of Pittsburgh funded the 1996 addition to the chapel’s north side. The addition houses an elevator designed to make the chapel completely accessible to individuals with disabilities.
When the cornerstone of the chapel was laid in 1934, University Chancellor John Bowman said, “The Chapel is designed as a fitting center for worship which in various ways will rise at the University. The character, intensity, the level of that worship may change from generation to generation. The spiritual tide in men rises and falls. Through these changes, though, the Chapel will stand, calm and undisturbed.”
The chapel has stood for more than half a century. The times have changed and, in some measure, changed back. Through it all, the chapel has fulfilled its mission as a vital part of the University of Pittsburgh and the community.
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