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All Saints Episcopal Church (6a6)
All Saints Episcopal Church may refer to: Belgium *All Saints Episcopal Church (Waterloo, Belgium), Waterloo, Belgium United States * All Saints' Episcopal Church (Beverly Hills, California) * All Saints Episcopal Church (Pasadena, California) * All Saints Episcopal Church (San Diego, California) * All Saints Episcopal Church (San Leandro, California) * All Saints Episcopal Church (Denver), listed on the NRHP in Colorado * All Saints' Church, Delmar, Sussex County, Delaware * All Saints Episcopal Church (Rehoboth Beach, Delaware) * All Saints Episcopal Church (Enterprise, Florida), listed on the NRHP in Florida * All Saints Episcopal Church (Fairbanks, Florida) * All Saints Episcopal Church (Fort Lauderdale, Florida) * All Saints Episcopal Church (Jacksonville) * All Saints Episcopal Church, Waveland (Jensen Beach, Florida) * All Saints' Episcopal Church (Lakeland), Florida * All Saints Episcopal Church (Winter Park, Florida), listed on the NRHP in Florida * All Saints' Ep ...
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Waterloo, Belgium
Waterloo (, ; wa, Waterlô) is a Municipalities of Belgium, municipality in Wallonia, located in the province of Walloon Brabant, Belgium, which in 2011 had a population of 29,706 and an area of . Waterloo lies a short distance south of Brussels, and immediately north-east of the larger town of Braine-l'Alleud. It is the site of the Battle of Waterloo, where the resurgent Napoleon was defeated for the final time in 1815. Waterloo lies immediately south of the official language border between Flanders and Wallonia. Etymology From Middle Dutch, composed of water (water, watery) + loo (forest, clearing in a forest, marsh, bog). History The name of Waterloo was mentioned for the first time in 1102 designating a small hamlet at the limit of what is today known as the Sonian Forest, along a major road linking Brussels, Genappe and a coal mine to the south. Waterloo was located at the intersection of the main road and a path leading to a small farming settlement in what is now Cense ...
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Episcopal Church Of All Saints (Indianapolis)
The Episcopal Church of All Saints serves the Old Northside Historic District near downtown Indianapolis. It is distinctive within the diocese for its Anglo-Catholic style of worship, and is historically significant as the first Episcopal Church in the United States to regularly ordain a woman as priest. The building also served as the cathedral of the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis from 1911 until 1954, when the bishop's seat was relocated to Christ Church Cathedral, Indianapolis. History All Saints is the successor to Grace Church, a parish founded in 1866.Bodenhamer, D. and Barrows, R. (1997), ''The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis'', p. 550 Under Bishop David Knickerbacker, Grace Church became pro-cathedral of the Diocese of Indiana in the late 19th century. Construction of All Saints Cathedral began on the site of Grace Church in 1910. The building was dedicated on All Saints Day in 1911. The 1912 diocesan convention designated the cathedral as "a House of Prayer, where ...
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All Saints Episcopal Church (Portsmouth, Ohio)
All Saints Episcopal Church is a historic building in Portsmouth, Ohio. Description It is located at 610 4th Street. The main mass of the church building was constructed in 1850 by William Newman and is an example of Gothic Revival architecture, the first of that style in Portsmouth. It was built in four sections the first in 1833. Sitting on a stone foundation the brick building has multiple steeply pitched gable roofs. Windows are separated by buttresses and topped by lancet arches. The main section, built in 1850, is a nave with a high altar. A two-story tower with paired narrow windows rises from the southwest corner of the nave. The facade of this mass has a large central rose window and two compounded gothic arch entries each with double vertical board doors. The section of the building called the guild hall was built in two sections. The first, from 1833, was the original church and retains its original stone foundation. A section was added to the west in the 1880s wit ...
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All Saints Episcopal Church (Valley City, North Dakota)
All Saints' Episcopal Church built in 1881 is a historic Episcopal church building located in Valley City, Barnes County, North Dakota. Designed in the Late Gothic Revival style of architecture by an unknown architect, it was built of local fieldstone with concrete mortar and a wooden shake roof. It is noted as the "first stone Episcopal church uiltin North Dakota." and On December 3, 1992, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places as part of the ''Episcopal Churches of North Dakota Multiple Property Submission''. All Saints is still a small but active parish in the Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota The Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota is the diocese of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America with jurisdiction over the state of North Dakota plus Clay County, Minnesota. It has 19 congregations in North Dakota and one in Moorhead .... References Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in North Dakota Episcopal church building ...
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All Saints Episcopal Church (Round Lake, New York)
All Saints' Episcopal Church, is an historic Carpenter Gothic church built in 1892 on Simpson Avenue in Round Lake, New York. It is a contributing property in the Round Lake Historic District. See also * Round Lake, New York Round Lake is a village in Saratoga County, New York, United States. The population was 1,245 at the 2020 census. The name is derived from a circular lake adjacent to the village. In 1975, the Round Lake Historic District, which encompasses the v ... References External links www.allsaintsroundlake.comDiocese of AlbanyVillage of Round Lake website Episcopal church buildings in New York (state) Carpenter Gothic church buildings in New York (state) Churches in Saratoga County, New York Historic district contributing properties in New York (state) National Register of Historic Places in Saratoga County, New York Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state) {{SaratogaCountyNY-NRHP-stub ...
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All Saints' Episcopal Church (Briarcliff Manor, New York)
All Saints' Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church in Briarcliff Manor, New York. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2002. John David Ogilby, whose summer estate and family home in Ireland were the namesakes of Briarcliff Manor, founded the church in 1854. The church was built on Ogilby's summer estate in Briarcliff Manor. Richard Upjohn designed the church building, which was constructed from 1848 to 1854 and expanded in 1911. The church has several memorial windows, including one by John LaFarge and a rose window by Frederick Wilson of Tiffany Studios. History The church's opening service was held on December 13, 1854, and Ogilby donated the church's current building and grounds in 1863. He gave the church its first name, "All Saints' Church, Brier Cliff, Sing Sing, N. Y.", naming his property Brier Cliff after his family home in Ireland. In 1910, the church building was enlarged to the present cruciform shape, and it was consecrated on N ...
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All Saints' Episcopal Church (Peterborough, New Hampshire)
All Saints Church is an historic Episcopal church located at 51 Concord Street in Peterborough, New Hampshire, in the United States. Completed in 1914, it is a completely realized example of an English country church as interpreted by the architect Ralph Adams Cram. On December 1, 1980, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. Description All Saints Church is located north of Peterborough's commercial downtown, on the east side of Concord Street (United States Route 202). It is a modest single-story structure, built out of locally quarried granite. It is basically cruciform in plan, its symmetry affected only by a small chapel extending from its southern transept. Its exterior is finished in rough ashlar stone. The main facade has a center entry set in a Gothic archway, with buttresses at the building corners. Set in the gable above the entrance is a round wagon-wheel stained glass window. A square tower rises above the crossing point of the nave and tr ...
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All Saints Episcopal Church (Saugatuck, Michigan)
All Saints Episcopal Church, built in 1872–1873, is an historic Carpenter Gothic church in Saugatuck, Michigan. On February 27, 1984, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. History The first Episcopal service in the vicinity of Saugatuck was conducted by Reverend J. Rice Taylor in 1862. The Saugatuck Episcopal congregation was officially organized in 1868. Taylor, who had been assigned to the parish in Holland, Michigan, acted as a missionary minister. The congregation immediately began planning for a church building, and in 1871 purchased the lot that this church sits on. Rev. Taylor was instrumental in raising funds for the church, both within and outside of the parish. (note: large pdf file) The congregation hired Detroit architect Gordon W. Lloyd Gordon W. Lloyd was an architect of England, English origin, whose work was primarily in the United States, American Midwestern United States, Midwest. After being taught by his uncle, Ewan Christian, at the ...
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All Saints' Church — Ashmont (Boston)
The Parish of All Saints, Ashmont, is a church of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts located at 209 Ashmont Street in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston Boston (), officially the City of Boston, is the state capital and most populous city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as well as the cultural and financial center of the New England region of the United States. It is the 24th- mo ..., Massachusetts. Built 1892-1929 for a congregation founded in 1867, it was the first major commission of architect Ralph Adams Cram, a major influence in the development of early 20th-century Gothic church and secular architecture. The church was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980, and is protected by a preservation easement held by Historic New England. Architecture All Saints is located in southern Dorchester, a short walk from the Ashmont (MBTA station), Ashmont station of the MBTA Red Line (MBTA), Red Line. It occupies a parcel bounded on thre ...
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All Saints' Church (Sunderland, Maryland)
All Saints' Church is a historic Episcopal church located at 100 Lower Marlboro Road (near the intersection of Southern Maryland Boulevard MD 4 and Solomons Island Road MD 2), in Sunderland, Calvert County, Maryland. All Saint's Parish was one of the thirty original Anglican parishes created in 1692 to encompass the Province of Maryland. In 1693 its first parish church, a log structure, was built on an acre of land called ''Kemp's Desire'' donated by Thomas Hillary. This log church was expanded in 1703-1704 and repaired at least 4 times before being replaced on top of the hill between MD routes 4, 262, and 2 by the present brick building.Middleton, the Rev. Canon Arthur Pierce, Ph.D., ''Anglican Maryland, 1692-1792'', Virginia Beach: The Donning Company, 1992, pp. 5, 69-70, Built between 1774 and 1777, the present church building is a Georgian structure of Flemish bond brick with random glazed headers. Since All Saint's Parish was part of the established church of the Pro ...
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All Saints Church (Frederick, Maryland)
All Saints Church, or All Saints Episcopal Church, founded in 1742, is a historic Episcopal church now located at 106 West Church Street in the Historic District of Frederick, Maryland. It is the seat of All Saints Parish, Diocese of Maryland, which covers most of Frederick County, Maryland and once covered most of Western Maryland. History Founding and Colonial Era In 1742, Maryland's General Assembly separated the westernmost parts of the vast Piscataway ( Broad Creek Church) parish to form the large "All Saints Parish". In 1747, Maryland's Assembly provided for buying land and constructing the parish church on Carroll's Creek, as well as chapels of ease between the Monocacy and Seneca Creeks (which ultimately became Poolesville) and another between the Antietam and Cannogocheague Creeks (which became Hagerstown). In 1770, legislation provided for separating Eden (or Zion or St. Peter's) parishes as well as St. John's Parish, Hagerstown, but such never became effective ...
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All Saints' Church (Easton, Maryland)
All Saints' Church is a historic Carpenter Gothic style Episcopal church at Easton, Talbot County, Maryland, United States. It is a small rectangular frame church constructed in 1900–1901. The exterior features of the church include a three-stage bell tower with a shingled spire. The interior features imported stained glass windows from Munich, Germany, along with decorative tile floors, a darkly stained exposed timber roof structure, and intricately carved church furniture. The church was designed by New York architect, Henry Martyn Congdon. All Saints' Church was listed on the National Register of Historic Places The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the United States federal government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures and objects deemed worthy of preservation for their historical significance or "great artistic v ... in 1983. References External links *, including photo from 1970, at Maryland Historical Trust Churches i ...
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