Bahai Story Library
Corinne True and the Temple Land at Wilmette
“This land is not for us. It is for the children's children of these friends.”
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Bahai Story Library
“This land is not for us. It is for the children's children of these friends.”
In the September 1920 issue of the *Star of the West* Mrs. Corinne True of Chicago contributed a long signed report on the status of the Temple project — the great enterprise, then already seventeen years in the making, of raising the first Mashriqu'l-Adhkár of the Western world on a small property at Wilmette, on the lake shore north of Chicago.
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The story Corinne told was of slow accumulation. The Master had given the first Tablet pointing to a Western House of Worship in 1903. He had specified, in subsequent Tablets, that it must rise on the shore of Lake Michigan near Chicago. He had laid the foundation stone Himself, in May of 1912, on a brief visit to the property. Between 1903 and 1920, in dollars and dimes, the friends across the United States had been giving toward the purchase and the eventual construction.
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The Temple Unity, the small national body charged with the project, had bought additional parcels of the Wilmette land year by year as the funds accumulated. By 1920 the full site had been assembled — a modest tract of a few acres looking across the lake toward Chicago. The next phase, Corinne wrote, would be the great task of raising the building itself.
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> This land is not for us. It is for the children's children > of these friends.
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The phrase was Corinne's own, set down in the *Star's* report of 1920 and quoted often afterwards. The believers who had contributed the early dimes and dollars — many of them working women, immigrants, small clerks and shopkeepers — had not expected to see the Temple finished in their own lifetimes. They had been giving in trust, into a future they themselves would not live into. The land at Wilmette, in Corinne's understanding, was a charge held in trust for a later generation of American believers who would carry the work to completion.
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The eventual story would prove her right. The first dome would be raised in the late 1920s. The exterior ornament — the intricate plaster work that would in time give the building its lacelike appearance — would not be finished until the late 1940s. The first formal services would be held there in 1953, more than half a century after the first Tablet. Many of the donors of 1920 would by then have already gone.
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Corinne True herself, named by 'Abdu'l-Bahá *the mother of the Temple,* would live to see the dome finished and the formal opening of the Temple. The land that she had asked her generation to gather, in the 1920 report in the *Star,* was held in their hands for the children's children, exactly as she had said.
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Source
by Star of the West Editors · 1920 · Bahai News Service
Read the original at bahai-library.com/star_of_the_west_volume_11