Tuesday, April 25, 2017

 

The Loretto Chapel Staircase

In the City of Santa Fe in the state of New Mexico, USA, there is an old building which attracts visitors from all over the world.  It is the The Loretto Chapel building. It became very famous because it has a spiral staircase which is mysterious or miraculous as many people who had seen it had claimed. This is because the staircase is very unusual in structure, and it was built under mysterious circumstances, by a lone man with simple carpentry tools and unidentifiable wood working reclusively. And the carpenter had come, built it and disappeared, leaving neither trace of his personality nor how the materials were obtained.

Many stories on it exist, and commonly they narrated that when the chapel building, 25 ft by 75 ft by 85 ft high including steeples and spires, and similar to the Sainte Chapelle in Paris, was completed it had a choir loft which had no stairway. Many carpenters were called, but none could figure out a fitting design due to insufficient space available. The nuns began a Rosary novena, or nine consecutive days of pray to St. Joseph, their patron saint. At the end of the novena, a gray-haired man on a burro appeared, carrying a tool chest containing a hammer, a saw and a T-square. He worked when the nuns were not praying in the chapel, using a few tubs of water for soaking the wood to make it pliable. However, no other record is available on the history of the construction of the stairway, and when it was completed it had no balustrade; the banisters were added later, sometime in 1887. 

The winding stairway is a masterpiece of beauty and wonder. The whole staircase was fixed with only square wooden pegs and no metal nails were used. It spirals 360 degree twice without the usual center pole like most circular stairways. It is fixed to the loft floor ledge with its whole weight resting on the base step. It is 22 feet in height and has 33 steps. The curves of the stringers is an exhibit of perfection and the steps fitted with precision.

Visitors and viewers invariably attributed this mysterious staircase as miraculous as it has withstood its firmness and stability for over the years up to now, showing signs of wear only on the edges. Many experts such as engineers, architects, wood specialists and master carpenters have examined and scrutinized the various aspects of the mystery too. Architects had declared it baffling, engineers wondered why it had not collapsed, but there were master carpenters who offered explanations for the stability of the stairway.

The reasoning is that a straight inclined staircase consists of two main stringers supporting the treads or steps. If this staircase is twisted into a helix, it would resemble the staircase at the Loretto Chapel. As to the strength of the Loretto Chapel staircase, there are three supporting features. The inside stringer, being of small diameter could amount to a column and be load-bearing; the double helix and the weight placed upon it could make it stronger; and the well-fitted square wooden pegs could reinforce it as a virtual monolithic entity.

While there were explanations for the engineering aspects, the nature of it and its coming into being remain to be viewed as miraculous. St. Joseph was the patron saint of this chapel, and the nuns had prayed a Rosary novena to him. A lone carpenter had arrived on the last day of the prayers, and he had built it and disappeared without being recognized. He worked alone reclusively using only a few primitive tools, yet the work was so exact, executed with precision and completed in perfection. That was in the 1870's and the man had no design plans; yet the wood pieces were exquisitely crafted and structurally matching. Master carpenters marveled it as exceptional craftsmanship, a work which the qualified professionals had all declined.

Only square wooden pegs were used, it has no nails or screws. The outside stringer is a spliced perfectly curved structure of ten pieces while the inside stringer is of eight pieces. Altogether it has 33 treads and 33 risers. The wood is not native to the state of New Mexico and no wood specialists have been able to identify neither the wood used nor where it came from.  

The coincidences that there were 33 steps and that Jesus was crucified at the age of 33 years old, that St. Joseph who was Jesus foster father was also the patron saint of carpenters, and that the Rosary novena was made to St. Joseph, all added to the belief of this staircase existence as miraculous, built by St. Joseph himself. 


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