
Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew
The 'Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew', also commonly known as 'St. Andrew's Cathedral,' is a
cathedral of the
Episcopal Church in the
United States located in the
State of
Hawai‘i. Formerly the seat of the
Anglican Church of Hawaii, it is now the home of the
bishop of the
Episcopal Diocese of Hawaii.
Kamehameha IV and Emma, his
queen consort, were devout members of the
Church of England led by their good friend
Victoria of the United Kingdom. Inspired to build a place of worship in the Anglican tradition, Kamehameha IV commissioned the construction of what would later become the Cathedral of Saint Andrew. However, the king died on the
feast day of
Saint Andrew in
1863 before ground-breaking.
Kamehameha V, the king's brother, took over the project and laid the cornerstone in honor of his predecessor.
The Cathedral of Saint Andrew was built in the
French Gothic architectural style, shipped in several pre-fabricated pieces from
England. The western facade has a window of hand-blown
stained glass that reaches from the floor to the eaves, depicting the European explorers that visited the
Hawaiian islands.
There are only three other cathedrals in the Hawaiian Islands —
Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace,
Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Cathedral of the Pacific of the
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America and the
Co-Cathedral of Saint Theresa of the Child Jesus of the
Roman Catholic Diocese of Honolulu.
Resources
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Anglicanism in Hawai'i
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Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew
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Saint Andrew's Priory School
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Orthodox Christian Church in Hawaii