Plans for the building, located on the west side of 10th Avenue East between East Highland Drive and East Galer Street on
Capitol Hill, were drawn up in 1926. Fundraising took place for two years until construction began in 1928. Ground was broken on September 30, 1928. The
Great Depression took a toll on the parish, however. Construction was incomplete when the
cathedral was dedicated on April 25, 1931, and the parish was in default on its mortgage throughout the 1930s. The cathedral was
foreclosed upon in 1941 and shut for the next two years. From 1943 to 1944, the
United States Army used the cathedral as an anti-aircraft training facility; the evidence of this era can still be seen in murals in the crypt. In 1944, Bishop
S. Arthur Huston reopened discussions with the parish's bankers in
St. Louis,
Missouri; over the next three years, more funds were raised, and in 1947 the mortgage was paid. The mortgage document was burned before the Parish on Palm Sunday. The cathedral's
dean,
Robert V. Taylor, resigned abruptly in March 2008, stating that he and the vestry (church board) diverged in their visions for the future of St. Mark's and there was a loss of trust between them. After several years of transitional ministry, Taylor was succeeded by Steven Lynn Thomason in the summer of 2012. Thomason shares clerical ministry with the Rev. Canon Emily A. Griffin as Vicar, the Rev. Canon Richard C. Weyls as associate rector, the Rev. Earl Grout as deacon, and a handful of non-stipendiary priests. ==Location==