Bishop
Gray retired in 1910. On Ascension Day in that year, he presented
to the Cathedral as a thank offering a processional cross
which is still in use. The carved oak pulpit in the Cathedral
is a memorial to Bishop Gray.
The Rt.
Rev. Cameron Mann, Bishop of North Dakota, succeeded Bishop
Gray. A series of Deans offered leadership that steadily advanced
the growth of the parish and its spiritual influence throughout
the period of World War I and the 1920's. At the General Convention
of 1922, The Missionary Jurisdiction of South Florida was
admitted as a Diocese and the first Diocesan Convention was
held in the Cathedral in January 1923.
In October,
1922, the old Cathedral building was moved to the south side
of the tract of land to make room for a glorious new Cathedral.
It was designed by the famous architects of the Washington
Cathedral, the firm of Frohman, Robb, and Little of Boston.
The cornerstone was laid by Bishop Mann on April 13,1925.
Because
of the depression, which came to Florida in 1926, the building
was only partially constructed. A "temporary" wall
sealed the altar end. The first services were conducted in
the new Cathedral on Easter Even, April 3,1926, by Bishop
Mann, when a large confirmation class was presented to him.
The ensuing
period presented severe economic hardships. Members of the
Cathedral parish made significant sacrifices to keep and maintain
the properties they had worked so hard to obtain.
The Rev.
John Durham Wing was elected and consecrated as Bishop Coadjutor
on September 25,1925. He succeeded Bishop Mann in 1932, and
his installation service was held in the Cathedral on May
12.
The Rev.
Melville F. Johnson, student pastor at the University of Florida,
became the sixth Dean on January 1, 1931 and served for twenty-two
years. He led the construction of the L-shaped educational
unit, which stands behind the present Chapter House. It is
a memorial to members of the Cathedral who died in World War
II.
The Rev.
Osborne R. Littleford became the Cathedral's seventh Dean
in 1952. Under his leadership, the present Chapter House was
erected and the Cathedral parish grew steadily. At this time
several of the suburban churches were established, and many
of the Cathedral families transferred to them to help form
a foundation for their growth.
In 1959,
the Rev. Francis Campbell Gray became the eighth Dean and
guided the destiny of the Cathedral family for twelve years.
During his tenure, communicant strength reached a new high.
The Rt.
Rev. Henry Irving Louttit, who had served as Suffragan from
1945 to 1948 and as Coadjutor from 1948 to 1950, directed
the Diocese of South Florida during its greatest period of
growth and expansion. New parishes proliferated. Diocesan
communicant strength tripled. As he approached retirement,
machinery was set up through Convention to study the possibility
of dividing the Diocese of South Florida. This was accomplished
in 1970 when the old Diocese of South Florida was divided
into three dioceses. St. Luke's continued as the Cathedral
Church for the Diocese of Central Florida. Bishop Louttit
served very briefly as its first Bishop, succeeded by The
Rt. Rev. William H. Folwell who retired in 1990. The Rt. Rev.
John W. Howe followed Bishop Folwell and is the present Bishop
of the Diocese of Central Florida.
In January,
1971, The Rev. Charles T. Gaskell became the ninth Dean of
the Cathedral, serving until his consecration in June, 1973,
as Bishop Coadjutor of Milwaukee. Under Dean Gaskell's leadership,
the renovation of the Cathedral nave with the erection of
the choir gallery over the narthex and installation of the
88-rank pipe organ was achieved.
In September,
1973, The Rev. O'Kelley Whitaker, Rector of Emmanuel Church,
Orlando, became the tenth Dean. With Bishop Folwell's encouragement
and under Dean Whitaker's leadership, the Cathedral grew as
a strong downtown parish, becoming a center for Diocesan functions
and an example of excellence in worship, liturgical arts and
music.
Dean Whitaker
resigned after his election as Bishop Coadjutor of the Diocese
of Central New York in November, 1980. The Rev. George H.
Back (current Dean of the Cathedral in Oklahoma City) served
as Interim Dean for one year.
The Rev.
Harry B. Sherman, rector of St. Paul's Church, Patchogue,
Long Island, and Dean of Suffolk County in the Diocese of
Long Island, accepted the call to become the eleventh Dean
of the Cathedral, beginning his ministry at the Cathedral
on September 1, 1981.
Through
1986 and 1987, the temporary wall which was constructed in 1926,
was removed and the Cathedral building was finally completed
much as it had been originally planned, The completed Cathedral
includes an apse, ambulatory, priests and working sacristies,
a bell tower and the St. Mary Chapel.
Under the
leadership of The Very Rev. Dr. G. Richard Lobs III, the twelfth
dean, from 1993 to 2006, the Cathedral experienced substantial
spiritual and numerical growth.
The growth
and vitality continue with the Cathedral's thirteenth dean,
The Very Rev. Anthony P. Clark, who was installed
in December 2006. The
congregration looks forward to continuing excellence
in worship and gowth in the knowledge and love of Jesus Christ
under Dean Clark's leadership.