Saint Ann’s Episcopal Church (295 St Ann’s Ave, Bronx, NY ) also known as Saint Ann’s Church of Morrisania, is a historic Episcopal church in Mott Haven, the South Bronx, New York City.
Founder, Gouverneur Morris Jr. (1813-1888) had St. Ann’s Church built in memory of his mother, Ann Cary Randolph Morris, who died in 1837. His father, Gouverneur Morris Sr. is known as “the Penman of the Constitution”, because he put the United States Constitution into words. He also also designed the street grid for Manhattan and was one of the founders of Kings College (now known as Columbia).
The church is named in honor of St. Ann, the grandmother of Jesus, because the founder’s mother was Ann Cary Randolph Morris of Virginia, a direct descendant of Pocahontas.
It was built in 1840 and donated by him as a family monument, the Morrisania Memorial. It is a field stone building in the Gothic Revival style with a vernacular Greek Revival style tower. The complex includes the stone parish house added in 1916, late-19th century Sunday School and gymnasium building, and a graveyard that includes the Morris family crypt.
It is the oldest continuously used church in the Bronx. When the church was founded, the entire South Bronx was called “Morrisania”; however the neighborhood where the church is located was sold to J.L. Mott, who renamed it “Mott Haven”.
The complex was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. It was designated a New York City landmark in 1967.