In the 1880’s large numbers of Germans emigrated to the United States.
Some left seeking more room and economic opportunities for their
families, opportunities that the new factory jobs in Germany were not
giving. Others were determined to avoid a new three-year mandatory
military service requirement. Some of those who came settled in Chester.
In 1889, a few of them gathered to form a new congregation, Holy Trinity
Lutheran Church. The congregation was the social center for their families.
Services were held in German. They first met in a member’s house, and
then found a little hall around 3rd and Kerlin Streets for their services.
By 1890 a Ladies’ Aid Society and a Young Peoples’ Association had been
formed.
Development and change happened quickly. A pastor was called. A new
hall down the block was rented. Ground was broken for the first church
building, and by 1894 it was ready for use.
At the turn of the century, center Chester was a fashionable shopping district
that attracted shoppers – the women dressed up with gloves! There was a
roller skating rink and there were theaters. The Chester Ferry provided a
link with New Jersey. There were many churches – usually reflecting the
European roots (Italian, Polish, English, German) of their members.
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Around 1918 the congregation built a beautiful new stone church
building with a big social hall and kitchen. The building included the
large granite baptismal font which is now in the garden outside Holy Trinity
Church. World War I had brought changes to Holy Trinity, though.
One had to do with language. Not long after the war, the
congregation started worshipping in English. There was a lot of
anti-immigrant feeling in America in those days, and even before the war,
President Theodore Roosevelt had warned against "hyphenated Americans."
The language changed. But there was also an evangelical spirit
in the congregation, as evidenced by its helping to start two new missions
in the area in 1919 – Christ Sunday School in Marcus Hook and Nativity
Lutheran Church in North Chester. |
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Like many congregations, Holy Trinity struggled through the financial
depression of the early 1930’s, most of the time barely able to meet the
annual budget. (In 1936, total receipts were $4651). During
this time, however, the men of the congregation renovated the interior of
the church and parish house. |  |
When World War II came, Chester experienced the biggest boom of its history.
Thousands of people flocked to the city from upstate Pennsylvania and
from southern U.S. to find the jobs created by the boom in industry.
Holy Trinity was right in the middle of the growth. The city’s
population grew to an all-time high of 70,000.
The growth also changed Holy Trinity. As the congregation grew, its once
large facility didn’t look so large anymore. As members spread out into
farther neighborhoods – racial change was a part of what was happening in
Chester and some moved away from it -- parking on the crowded residential
streets became more difficult. Some worshippers began to have concerns
for their safety.
In 1947 the congregation voted to sell its property to an African Methodist
Episcopal Zion Church. The sale had happened so quickly the first
authorization to sell had occurred only three months before), that the
congregation had no place to go. It worshipped at a near-by Methodist
church for a while, and then purchased the Allen family mansion now the Carr
Funeral Home) on Providence Road in Wallingford, along with six acres of
property. The mansion was renovated for church use, and services were
held there for the first time on Christmas Eve, 1948. Ninety-six
persons were present.
The congregation took over six years to pay off the loan on the new property
and the building renovations. Then it set to work building a church
sanctuary. The present facility was completed near the end of 1957.
The narrow steeple and clear glass etched windows set the building
apart as planted to reach a more modern age.
Activity and membership-wise, Holy Trinity’s peak was in the early 1960’s.
There were two services, and one year the average Sunday attendance
hit 273. Membership grew to over 1,300. Average Sunday School
attendance was about a hundred. Church suppers, Boy Scouts, Christmas
tree sales, and Strawberry Festivals were community events. By the late
60’s, the congregation also began to turn itself more towards those in need in
the community. A prior pastor had already left to help form the Chester
East Side Ministry. The congregation looked for other ways to be of
service. By 1970, the Holy Trinity Nursery School was founded.
Outside the sanctuary, however, the congregation was still dealing with pretty
limited space. Sunday School and social events, as well as the new nursery
school, were still held in the old mansion. Some of that was resolved in
1975 (after a close congregational vote!) with the addition of a social hall and
classrooms adjacent to the new sanctuary. Unfortunately, some of the
overcrowding was also relieved by the gradual decline in membership. The
congregation would eventually decline to only about 230 members.
Holy Trinity has never had long-term pastorates, and that continued during the
last quarter of the 20th century. There were pastorates of six, eight, ten
years and then often a year or two of interim. Lay members, however, along
with pastoral guidance, did carry on significant ministries during these years.
The Nursery School grew to become a major and well-respected institution
in the community. In the 1980’s, the congregation adopted Wesley House, a
haven for the homeless in Chester, as an on-going project. The congregation
sponsored a refugee family being resettled by Lutheran Children and Family Service
and supported work done at Chester East Side Ministry. It gave financial
support to various Synod projects and ministries.
People who have been in the Wallingford area since the late 1990’s also know Holy
Trinity as the "church that had the fire." A mentally challenged man who lived
in the woods behind the church set the church on fire one night in late 1998 and did
significant damage to the office area and sanctuary. The congregation worshipped
in the social hall for 18 months. In the end, however, the building was rebuilt
to its former beauty and even with a few needed improvements.
The mid-part of the first decade of the 21st century has brought new promise.
New people, especially families with young children, are coming back to Holy
Trinity. Forty-six new members were received in 2006, and the congregation as
begun to use the strength of its long history to look for ways to be of service in
the future.

Pastors of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church
| Charles W. Jefferis | 1889-1891 |
| I. Chantry Hoffman | 1982-1904 |
| U.S.G. Bertolet | 1904-1911 |
| John W. Hauser | 1912-1920 |
| John I. Meck | 1920-1926 |
| H.A. Weaver | 1926-1943 |
| George Ammon | 1943-1946 |
| Wilmer F. Furman | 1946-1952 |
| Julius Kish | 1952-1963 |
| John M. Scherch | 1963-1971 |
| Russell L. Brukaker, Jr. | 1972-1980 |
| James A. Hulihan | 1981-1991 |
| Daniel Dickhart | 1992-1997 |
| Daniel Lyman | 1998-2004 |
| Gordon E. Simmons | 2006- |
A somewhat more detailed history of Holy Trinity is maintained at the
Old Chester PA web site.