Fr. James Albers, OSB, who was instrumental in orchestrating the
actual photo shoot years later, provided a brief history of the abbey
and its architecture:
“One of the most magnificent buildings in the state of Kansas and
the Midwestern United States, St. Benedict’s Abbey was the vision of
Abbot Martin Veth, OSB. Abbot Martin was the second abbot of the
community, which was founded in 1857, to serve German immigrants
to the United States through education and parochial work.
Abbot Martin, born in 1874 in Dettelbach, Bavaria, came with his
family to America in 1884 where they first settled in Buffalo, N.Y.,
and later that year moved to Atchison, Kansas. He was trained in
theology at Sant’Anselmo in Rome, Italy, where he developed lasting
friendships with several monks from his home country.
At the time of Abbot Martin’s election as abbot in 1921, the community
had grown substantially since the second monastery was built in
1893. Abbot Martin’s vision then was to build an abbey structure
that rivaled the magnificent abbeys in Europe to mirror the spiritual
growth he had planned for his community. Thus he began working
with the architectural firm of Brielmaier and Sons, of Milwaukee,
Wisc., to develop plans for a Gothic structure that would include the
new Abbey, an Abbey Church, guest house and library. The location
would place the beautiful building on the river bluff 100 feet above
the Missouri River with a view over the expanse of the four-mile-wide
river valley. Such an imposing structure would of course require great
resources, and so the abbey community decided to move forward and
took on a $300,000 loan to begin construction.
To celebrate the breaking of ground for construction, Abbot Martin’s
good friend from his Sant’Anselmo days, Abbot Fidelis von Stotzingen,
oversaw the celebration. Once abbot of Maria Laach in Germany,
Abbot Fidelis was then serving as the Abbot Primate of the Benedictine
order at Sant’Anselmo. Ground was broken on November 11, 1926,
the Feast of St. Martin, and construction began in the spring of
1927.
The stone for the abbey was quarried from the local Kerford Quarries
south of Atchison and was brought to the building site north of town
along the river on rail cars. To get the stone to the site from the rail
cars located 100 feet below, a 45-degree rail was built up the side of
the river bluff. The stone was delivered up the rail to the 80 to 100
stonemasons waiting at the top of the bluff to cut and mold it for
construction. Construction costs, however, did not meet the architect’s
estimates and the construction of the Abbey Church, guest house and
library had to be postponed. Only the first two floors of the interior
were completed and additional loans had to be taken out bringing the
cost of the new Abbey to $780,000.
Even with this hardship, the new Abbey was blessed on August 5,
1929, with the hope that construction would resume again soon to
complete the Abbey Church. However, a few months later the United
States experienced what would later be called “Black Monday,” a crash
of the stock market, and the onset of the Great Depression that plagued
the country during the 1930s. Construction on the Abbey Church had
to be put off indefinitely.
St. Benedict’s Abbey during construction, 1927-29
(Incidentally, famed aviator Amelia Earhart’s birthplace
is located just blocks from the abbey. As construction
began on the new Gothic abbey in 1927, Ms. Earhart was
about to be named the first female officer of the National
Aeronautical Association.)
East side of the Abbey, facing the Missouri River
Aerial view of the Abbey & Missouri River valley
Front, or west side of St. Benedict’s Abbey before
the Abbey Church was built
TUTTO ARABI 319