
Winston
Churchill's Living Memorial

As the church nears completion, the bells, donated by Mrs. V.H. McNutt, are installed within the church tower.
Wishing to commemorate Winston Churchill's visit to Fulton in 1946 while filling the void of an adequate campus church facility, Westminster began its reconstruction of Christopher Wren's Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury in the spring of 1964 as the Winston Churchill Memorial and Library. Fittingly, former United States President Harry S Truman, former Westminster President Franc L. McCluer and the other living members of the 1946 platform party joined British Ambassador Lord Harlech for the Memorial's groundbreaking ceremony that year.

President Truman turns the symbolic first shovel during the 1964 ground breaking ceremony
first shovel for the reconstruction on April 19, 1964.

Scaffolding surrounds the Church of St. Mary in London, England.
After nearly five years of construction of what the London Times called "perhaps the biggest jigsaw puzzle in the history of architecture," dedication ceremonies for the Memorial were held on May 7, 1969. Following a parade led by 41 bagpipers from the St. Andrews Society of Kansas City and a luncheon catered by Vincent Sardi of New York, the official dedication ceremonies began within the Church of St. Mary. In a meaningful and highly ritualistic ceremony, the Right Rev. Anthony Tremlett, the Bishop of Dover, England, rehallowed the Church as a place of worship.

With its interior columns in place, the church begins to take shape.
William B. Huntley Jr., college chaplain.

Lady Soames stands during the dedication.

This 1969 photo depicts the formal rehallowing ceremony for the Church of St. Mary
