These louvers, as seen from the interior,
serve as vents in the Chapel tower.
This keyboard, housed in the Chapel
tower, allows manual playing of the
carillon (bells).
Wiggins carved the Sacrifice of Isaac at
the end of a misericord in the chantry.
John Hargate of the Form of 1860 is
the first of 160 alumni clergy names
carved into a plaque in the chantry.
This is one in a series of stone-carved
faces in the altar’s sanctuary.
Carvings in the reredos at the altar,
given in memory of W.H. Vanderbilt
of the Form of 1889.
Stonework above the Chapel’s south
(main) entrance.
A stone-carved angel rests above the
Chapel’s south door.
The spire above the Chapel crossing. Decorative iron lamp at the cloister
door, closest to Lower School Pond.
Rector Samuel Drury bought
the south door’s hardware in
Damascus.
A hand-carved dragon adorns a Chapel
pew in the Choir Room.
The effigy of First Rector Henry
Coit lies at the altar.
Many of the organ’s 3,800 pipes
are hidden behind the balcony
that overlooks the crossing.
The peace cranes that hang above the
crossing symbolize solidarity with the
victims of the 2011 earthquake in Japan.
The ornate hardware on the Chapel’s
north door is one example of the
building’s detail.