West End Collegiate was built as part of the rapid development of the
Upper West Side in the late nineteenth century—from country estates to an urban neighborhood of town houses and, later, apartment buildings. On October 16, 1890, the Consistory of the Collegiate Church instructed the "Committee on a new church site west of
Central Park" to price several plots of land of a minimum size of seven lots. The Committee purchased four lots on
West End Avenue and three lots on 77th Street for $89,000. A building committee was formed and construction began in 1891. The building stood complete in the fall of 1892 and dedicated on November 20, 1892. On November 19, 1892, The Reverend Henry Evertson Cobb of
West Troy, New York was called to become the first minister of the Church. During
World War II the church was a center for the Dutch refugee and relief effort; Princess
Juliana of the Netherlands visited twice during the war. The church buildings were designated a
New York City Landmark in 1967 and listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1980. ==Architecture==