Chapel Car 5 Messenger of Peace has been awarded a prestigious Save America’s Treasures grant. On 9 December 2009 the Institute of Museum and Library Services – in collaboration with the President’s Council on Arts and Heritage, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Park Service – announced selection of the chapel car project from a pool of 402 eligible applications. In all, $9.5 million funded 41 applications.
The Chapel Car will receive $180,000 that will match funding awarded from the Washington State Historical Society’s Capital Projects for Washington’s Heritage program ($125,000), 4Culture’s Landmark Rehabilitation and Landmark Challenge grant programs ($37,000), a 4Culture Collection Care grant ($4,000) and a variety of private contributions.
Chapel Car 5 was built in 1898 for the American Baptist Publication Society. For 50 years it traveled through Washington and 10 other States bringing modern evangelism to the frontier. For two years it promoted the Railroad YMCA, and in its later years was used to conduct revivals. In 1899 a fatally ill Reverend Moody of the Moody Bible Institute traveled in the car on his final trip home.
In 1917, Car 5 traveled through Snoqualmie to conduct services in North Bend and later traveled to Issaquah to serve that community at the onset of America’s involvement in WW I. The car served dozens of communities in Western Washington and King County. After retirement, the car was adapted for use as a road side diner near Snohomish, WA, and later as a cottage at Grayland, WA. The artifact was donated to the Museum and moved to Snoqualmie in 2007.
Messenger of Peace is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Washington Heritage Register, and the King County and City of Snoqualmie Landmarks Register. It is recognized as the only Nationally-significant object in the Museum’s collection and this status helped secure the Save America’s Treasures grant.
The Save America’s Treasures grant will allow substantial completion of the Chapel Car rehabilitation. Work is expected to begin in second quarter 2010 following preparation of a detailed work plan and a successful review of that plan by the Washington State Department of Archeology and Historic Preservation. Work will take between 18 and 24 months to complete.
Bravo to Richard and the NWRM crew for this auspicious award! Well deserved.
Oh that is great news – you work so hard. Merry Christmas from me and Mom to Tanya, you and the boys
Congratulations!! From Historic Prairie Village, (west of Madison, South Dakota) where "Chapel Car Emmanuel" resides.
These chapel cars are truely…"America's Treasures"!
A great book "This Train Is Bound For Glory" tells of their adventures.
Best Wishes, and Again…Congratulations!
Hi Kelli – I don't know whether you've subscribed to these comments so you may not see this, but… Just wanted to let you know that a Facebook "fan" mentioned Historic Prairie Village on Chapel Car 5 Messenger of Peace's page. When the current Partners in Preservation Initiative for restoration funding closes May 12, we'll write some more posts about Emmanuel and chapel car history to keep the page going. You can see it even if you're not on FB: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Chapel-Car-5-Messenger-of-Peace/103411726367977. And will you please encourage Emmanuel/Historic Prairie Village folks to support Messenger of Peace rehabilitation by voting once a day through May 12, 2010, at http://www.PartnersInPreservation.org? Thank you!