St. Gabriel's grew out of the Church of St. John the Evangelist on 55th Street. The parish was formed in 1859.[2] Prior to the construction of the church, services were held in a two–story brick building at 306 East 36th Street. The first rector was Rev. William H. Clowry.
Land for the church at the corner of Second Avenue was donated by Henry James Anderson, Professor of Mathematics at Columbia College. A parochial school, located at 311 East 36th Street, was organized in 1860. The first floor of the boys school was the chapel, where Sunday Masses for the 1,500-member congregation were held.[3]
The church was dedicated on November 12, 1865, by Archbishop John McCloskey.[4][5] In 1885, parishioners donated a marble altar in memory of Father Clowry. Two of St. Gabriel's priests at the turn of the century later served as Cardinal Archbishop of New York, John Murphy Farley and Patrick Joseph Hayes.[6] Farley introduced electric lighting to the church.[7]
The sacramental records for the now-closed Church of St. Gabriel were transferred to nearby St. Stephen's Church. Early records for the parish school are at the College of Mount Saint Vincent, Riverdale.
Construction of a church building was delayed because of the American Civil War. The building was designed by architect Henry Engelbert in the Gothic Revival-style. The cornerstone was laid in 1864. The structure was brick with a brownstone façade and brownstone accents. The brownstone was quarried in Belleville, New Jersey. The groined ceiling rested on eighteen columns. The chancel featured a large painting of the Annunciation, by artist Giuseppe Mazzolini. Two side altars were dedicated to the Blessed Virgin and St. Joseph, respectively.
^ abShea, John Gilmary, ed. (1878). "Church of Saint Gabriel". The Catholic Churches of New York City. New York: Lawrence G. Goulding & Co. pp. 311–324. OCLC2524004.
^Bayor, Ronald H.; Meagher, Timothy J., eds. (1997). The New York Irish. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 675. ISBN0801857643. Retrieved November 21, 2023 – via Google Books.