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History of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church
St. Luke’s Episcopal Mission
was founded

in 1884 by pioneers who braved the hardships of the western frontier.
Some of the pioneers consisted of ranch families, raising cattle on a
large scale on the open prairie, and some were families of army
officers stationed at the nearby regimental garrison, Fort McKinney.
The young “cow town” of Buffalo had been established for only
six years, with statehood another six years down the road.
During the 1800’s, the pathways were difficult for visiting
missionaries and bishops as they traveled by wagon, buckboard and
horseback to bring the Gospel to the wilderness. In the midst of
the rugged life and wild frontier, St. Luke’s, with its small
beginnings, kept growing and shedding a ray of light into this western
community.
The cornerstone
of St. Luke’s was laid in 1889 by the members of the Masonic Lodge of
Buffalo. The Gothic style church building was built of red bricks
made locally. The massive beams in the ceiling were hewn in a sawmill
in the Big Horn Mountains and were hauled down the mountain by
freight wagons over steep, rugged trails. The furniture of the
Chancel, the Altar and the altar hangings were donated by the
Vanderbilt family of New York, who were related to an army officer at
Fort McKinney. A masquerade ball and a “Pink Tea” were hosted by the
ladies of the church to raise money for the building.
All was not
parties and teas on the frontier, however. St. Luke’s played a role
in history during the 1892 Johnson County Cattle War, which raged
between the cattlemen and the “rustlers”, men handy with a rope and a
branding iron. When Deputy Marshall George A. Wellman was murdered by
the “Taylor Gang”, known as the “Red Sashes”, the outlaws did not want
the lawman to have the honor of a Christian funeral at St. Luke’s.
The outlaws, however, did not reckon with the courage and
determination of The Rev. Charles Duell, members of St. Luke’s and the
Masons, all of whom carried concealed weapons during the funeral.
The strong conviction of these men prevented further bloodshed.
In 1897, Dr. H.U.
Onderdonk moved to Buffalo to become St. Luke’s lay reader. He was
ordained in 1900 and served as rector until his death in 1910. The
whole community loved “The Little Doctor” who was not only a physician
and clergyman, but also a chemist, mathematician, nurse and editor.
This “Good Samaritan” was so well respected that the parish hall,
built in 1925, was named in his memory. Onderdonk Hall still stands
today and is the main meeting place for many church and community
functions.
St. Luke’s has
seen many changes since becoming a parish in 1919. However, many
traditions have been handed down through the generations. The “Pink
Tea” is still very popular, as well as the annual “Surprise You Sale”,
hosted by the church women to raise money for mission work. The Bread
of Life Food Pantry, established in 1986 as Christmas food baskets for
the needy, continues as the main mission of St. Luke’s, but has grown
to feed 250 to 300 families each month. This parish family is proud
of its heritage, but tries to change with the needs of its family.
“If St. Luke’s Episcopal Church can give aid, help, comfort and
religious training to ‘all sorts and conditions of men’, then the
founders did not build in vain, for the above ideas were with them in
body, mind and soul.”
100 Years
of Worship, 1884-1984: by
Lillian Hogerson Baker,
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