The history of the memorial stained-glass window is recounted in this December 1953 article by the Rev. Gale D. Webbe in The Piedmont Churchman: “Parishioners of the Church of the Good Shepherd in Columbia enjoyed, and greatly profited from, an all-day visitation by Bishop Alfred Cole on Sunday, December 6. “During the 11:30 liturgy, Bishop Cole dedicated a new memorial stained-glass window, given by the Women’s Auxiliary of the parish “to the glory of God and in loving memory of Lewis Nathaniel Taylor,” rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd from 1925 to 1947. During his sermon, the Bishop extolled the saintly Dr. Taylor, whose long ministry is still a vivid memory and a strong power in the parish, the city, and throughout the entire diocese. “The memorial window is situated in the tower of the church, and can be viewed from inside the church by day and from the outside by night. It was designed by Henry Lee Willet of Philadelphia, nationally known stained-glass artist. Executed in the choicest hand-blown pot-metal glasses in rich color similar to those found in medieval cathedrals, the window portrays in decorative form the Good Shepherd, leaving the ninety and nine and retrieving the lost sheep to restore it to the fold.”