University United Methodist Church

University United Methodist Church, Austin, Texas, is a United Methodist Church belonging to the Rio Texas Conference of the United Methodist Church. Located at the corner of 24th Street and Guadalupe Street (known to locals as the "Drag"), UUMC has been a fixture near the University of Texas at Austin campus for more than 120 years.

History
University United Methodist Church began its life in 1887 under the name Austin City Mission. The congregation met in a tiny building called Honey Chapel, which was located on the northeast corner of 24th Street and Whitis Avenue, one block east of the present location of the church. The first pastor was Rev. John E. Stovall, who served as pastor for one year.

In 1888, the church was renamed Twenty-Fourth Street Church, and the congregation continued to meet in the building known as Honey Chapel until 1891.

In 1891, a new brick building was built at the corner of 24th Street and Nueces, two blocks west of the church's present location. This new church continued to be called Twenty-Fourth Street Church until 1895, when it was renamed Hotchkiss Memorial Church. (Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hotchkiss had been members of the church since the day of its first service in 1887.) The congregation remained Hotchkiss Memorial Church until 1905, when the name of the church was officially changed to University Methodist Church—even though services continued to be held in the Hotchkiss Memorial Church building until 1909.

In 1905, at the same time as the name change of the church, it was decided that the congregation would sell off the existing church building and property and invest the money in new property and a new building. The new property, on the Northeast corner of 24th Street and Guadalupe, was owned by an eccentric University of Texas math professor, who lived in a house built on stilts, and kept chickens under his house. The cornerstone for the new church was laid on October 8, 1907. Architect Frederick M. Mann designed the building, which was unlike any other in Austin at the time. The architectural style is considered to be Richardsonian Romanesque, similar to the style of buildings designed by noted architect Henry Hobson Richardson. The use of native limestone with a Mediterranean red-tile roof was unique in Austin at the time, although this style was soon adopted by The University of Texas as the central architectural style for most campus buildings built during the first half of the 20th century.

Work continued on the new church for nearly two years, with the congregation holding its first worship service in the new building on May 23, 1909.

A second building was added to the property in 1924. The Wesley Bible Chair building was constructed just north of the church, in the area now occupied by Heinsohn Hall. This new building housed all student activity at the church, as well as providing much-needed space for Sunday School classes and other meetings.

Also in 1924, the three-story rear section of the church was demolished and rebuilt, turning what had been Sunday School classrooms and offices into an expanded sanctuary and balcony space, leaving a few classroom spaces on either side. If you look at the exterior of the building, you can still see the third-floor windows underneath the eaves. While those windows once provided light to the classrooms on the third floor of the sanctuary, they are now only accessible from the attic above the barrel-vaulted section of the rear of the church.

The congregation purchased the property adjacent to the Wesley Bible Chair at some point before the 1940s, expanding the church's property to include the entire block between 24th and 25th Streets. An old bakery, along with several small buildings, were on that property, and those spaces were used for several years as meeting rooms for children's Sunday School, as well as Boy Scouts and other groups.

In 1949, the Wesley Bible Chair building was demolished, and a new education building was constructed. This four-story building, named Heinsohn Hall, still stands today, housing all offices for the church, along with a child care center, choir room, fellowship hall, chapel, library, kitchen and numerous Sunday School classrooms and meeting rooms.

A major renovation of the entire property was undertaken beginning in 1956, when the old bakery and other buildings on the corner of 25th Street were demolished to make room for a parking lot. During these renovations (known as "The Big Step" program), outdoor play areas attached to Heinsohn Hall's child care rooms were enclosed, and both Heinsohn Hall and the sanctuary building were air-conditioned. The exposed pipes in the sanctuary's pipe organ were covered with an organ screen, and the lantern or dome area in the ceiling of the sanctuary was closed off and turned into a fluorescent light fixture.

The name of the church changed again in 1968, when the Evangelical United Brethren Church joined with the Methodist Church (USA) to form The United Methodist Church. At that time, the official name of the church became University United Methodist Church.

The next major renovation to the church came in 1968-1969, when the original pipe organ was removed and a new Schantz pipe organ was installed. The new instrument was significantly larger than the original instrument, and the Schantz Organ Co. organ remains in place to this day.

The sanctuary was again renovated in 1978, when the chancel area and choir loft were expanded, and the dome was reopened to allow in natural light through the stained glass windows around its perimeter. Heinsohn Hall underwent a fairly large renovation in 1985 when an elevator tower was added to the building. Minor modifications were made to the sanctuary choir loft area in 1995, to accommodate a new Steinway grand piano.

In 2007, it was announced that a campaign would begin to raise money for a complete renovation of the now-100-year-old sanctuary building. This Capital Campaign was kicked off in early 2008, with the goal of raising $3 million for the first phase of the renovations. These renovations include a complete restoration/preservation of the stained glass windows, improving accessibility to the sanctuary for the mobility-impaired, and replacing the 100-year-old roof.

In 2014, a second phase of the renovation project was undertaken, which included replacement of the heating and air conditioning systems, and a complete renovation of the kitchen and all restrooms in both church buildings.

God Is Here
In 1978, as part of the Festival of Worship, a new hymn was commissioned from renowned hymnwriter Fred Pratt Green. That hymn, "God Is Here," has since been published in many languages and in many different hymnals, including The United Methodist Hymnal, The Presbyterian Hymnal, Christian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal, A New Hymnal for Colleges and Schools, among many others.

Former Director of Music Russell Schulz-Widmar, commenting on "God Is Here," said, "Certainly in the area of church music at UUMC, commissioning that hymn is one of the most important things we've done."

Becoming a Reconciling Congregation
The congregation began exploring issues around the Reconciling Ministry movement for at least a decade before it formally voted to affiliate with the Reconciling Ministries Network (RMN) in 2011. The first steps were small groups like individual Sunday School classes and Home Room groups deciding to join RMN. At its August 2010 meeting, the Administrative Council created an Ad Hoc subcommittee to hold Reconciling Ministries church-wide events in the fall to inform and educate the congregation about RMN and what it would mean for our local congregation to join the network. Fall 2010 activities sponsored by the subcommittee included:


 * A 7-week Sunday School class “Claiming the Promise” that explores the meaning of the four key Bible passages that allegedly condemn homosexuality;
 * Creation of a Reconciling Ministries brochure that says, among other things, that UUMC’s reconciling ministry will advocate for changing discriminatory language in the Book of Discipline (“homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching”);
 * A Retired Pastor’s Roundtable to discuss GLBT issues they’ve encountered during their careers;
 * Screening of “For the Bible Tells Me So”;
 * Professor L. Michael White lecture and discussion on the most misunderstood Bible passages related to homosexuality;
 * Two open forums at church to discuss RMN.

On February 27, 2011, 93% of members attending a called Church Conference voted in favor of affiliating with RMN.

The UUMC Choir
The earliest references to a choir in church publications date to the 1890s. For more than a century, UUMC has had a strong commitment to classical sacred music, led mainly by the UUMC Choir. Beginning in the early 1970s, the music ministry led by Directors of Music Russell Schulz-Widmar and Suzanne Schulz-Widmar built the UUMC Choir to a peak membership of around 75 members in the mid-1980s. In 1985, the UUMC Choir toured England, singing in such places as Westminster Abbey, Coventry Cathedral, Norwich Cathedral, and the Washington National Cathedral. This choral music ministry has continued to this day. Marc Erck was Director of Music and Worship from 1993 to 2014. Jolene Webster led the music ministry as Director of Music Ministries from 2015 to 2021.

The UUMC Choir is known for performing large works of sacred choral literature. Some of these works include:

Johann Sebastian Bach: Magnificat Benjamin Britten: A Ceremony of Carols Benjamin Britten: Rejoice in the Lamb Benjamin Britten: Saint Nicolas Maurice Duruflé: Requiem Gabriel Fauré: Requiem Howard Goodall: Eternal Light - A Requiem George Frideric Handel: Israel in Egypt George Frideric Handel: Messiah George Frideric Handel: Utrecht Jubilate Joseph Haydn: Missa in Angustiis (Lord Nelson Mass) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: "Great" Mass in C minor Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Requiem John Rutter: Requiem John Rutter: Gloria K. Lee Scott: Gloria (Commissioned by UUMC in 2009)

Austin City Mission
John E. Stovall, 1887–1888

Twenty-Fourth Street Church
F. E. Hammond, 1888-1889 E. D. Mouzon, 1889-1890 F. E. Hammond, 1890-1891 Giles C. Rector, 1891-1893 S. W. Thomas, 1893-1895 Elijah L. Shettles, 1895–1896

Hotchkiss Memorial Church
E. S. Smith, 1896-1898 F. S. Jackson, 1898 Elijah L. Shettles, 1898-1899 Clyde B. Garrett, 1899-1901 D. Knox Porter, 1901–1905

University Methodist Church
New Harris, 1905-1906 Cullom H. Booth, 1906-1910 D. Emory Hawk, 1910-1912 Robert P. Shuler, 1912-1916 A. Frank Smith, 1916-1918 K. P. Barton, 1918-1924 T. F. Sessions, 1924-1926 H. Bascom Watts, 1926-1930 L. U. Spellman, 1930-1934 Edmund Heinsohn, 1934-1958 James William Morgan, 1958–1969

University United Methodist Church
William A. Holmes, 1969-1974 George M. Ricker, 1974-1985 J. Charles Merrill, 1985-2004 Carl W. Rohlfs, 2004-2010 Ann Brown Fields (interim pastor), 2010 John R. Elford, 2010-2021 Teresa Welborn, 2021-present

Associate and Assistant Pastors
H. M. Whalum, 1910-1912 Walter E. Kerr, 1943-1945 Calvin E. Freohner, 1945-1950 Robert E. Ledbetter, 1953-1954 Brady B. Tyson, 1954-1956 Gregory Robertson, 1956-1958 Jesse M. Mothersbaugh, 1958-1959 Jack Hooper, 1959-1963 Fred Kight, 1959-1963 H. Myron Braun, 1961-1968 F. Gene Leggett, 1963-1964 Albert B. Clayton, 1964-1967 Walter Pilgrim, 1965-1966 Norman D. Roe, 1966-1969 Gary W. Frederick, 1967-1972 Sanford Coon, 1969-1975 Janice R. Huie, 1973-1975 W. Grady Roe, 1975-1979 Robert E. Hall, 1976-1979 Laurita Nielsen, 1979 Gary Reuthinger, 1979 Roy C. Ricker, 1980-1988 Karen Vannoy Levbarg, 1986-1992 David J. Minnich, 1986-2000 Monte Marshall, 1990-1994 Kathryn Longley, 1992-1997 J. Richard Wilson, 1994-2003 Martine Stemerick, 1997-1998 Rosie L. Johnson, 1998-2005 Barrett Renfro, 2000-2008 Bill Frisbee, 2002–2014 Suzanne Field Rabb, 2006-2007 Darlene Boaz, 2007–2010 Susan Sprague, 2010-2014 Lisa Blaylock, 2014- Heather Green, 2014-