All Saints Chapel (other)
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All Saints Chapel (other)
All Saints Chapel (or All Saints' Chapel) may refer to: * All Saints Chapel, Instow, a combined Church of England chapel and community centre in Instow, Devon, England *All Saints Chapel and Morris Family Burial Ground, in Morris, Otsego County, New York, listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) *All Saints' Chapel (Rosendale, New York), listed on the NRHP *All Saints' Chapel (Sewanee), located on the campus of Sewanee: The University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee *All Saints Chapel, Somerford, a chapel of ease attached to Somerford Hall, Cheshire, England * Royal Chapel of All Saints, a church in the grounds of Windsor Great Park, Berkshire, England See also * All Saints Church (other) *All Saints Episcopal Church (other) 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 Churc ...
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All Saints Chapel, Instow
All Saints Chapel is a combined Church of England chapel and community centre in Instow, Devon, England. History All Saints was designed by the local architect Mr. Burnett Napier Henderson Orphoot in memory of his late wife, Marjorie Harriet Orphoot, who died in 1933. Once constructed and furnished at his sole expense, Orphoot gifted the building to Instow as a chapel of ease to the parish church of St John. It was built on a plot of land provided by Mrs. Orphoot's sister, in an area of the village over half a mile from the parish church. Construction of the chapel began in September 1935, and it was dedicated by the Bishop of Exeter, the Right Rev. Lord William Cecil, on 27 February 1936. Today services at the chapel are held weekly between November to Easter and monthly during the summer. It also serves as a community centre. Architecture Orphoot designed the chapel in the Renaissance style Renaissance architecture is the European architecture of the period between the e ...
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All Saints Chapel And Morris Family Burial Ground
All Saints Chapel and Morris Family Burial Ground is a historic Episcopal Church (United States), Episcopal church (building), church located at Morris (village), New York, Morris in Otsego County, New York. The church is a small stone Gothic Revival architecture, Gothic Revival style chapel built from about 1866 to 1868. The rectangular building is three bays wide and four bays deep under a steeply sloping gable roof with slate shingles. It features a projecting central Bell-Cot, bell-cote tower and a large rose window. The first burial in the Morris Family Burial Ground dates to 1791 and it remains an active family burial ground. Also on the property is a wagon shed dating to the 1860s. ''See also:'' It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997. References External links

* * {{National Register of Historic Places in New York Properties of religious function on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state) Cemeteries on the Nation ...
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All Saints' Chapel (Rosendale, New York)
The Rosendale Library, formerly the All Saints' Chapel, is located on Main Street ( NY 213) in Rosendale, New York, United States. It was originally built as a Gothic Revival Episcopal church from locally mined Rosendale cement, a material which covers the stonework exterior walls. After floods from nearby Rondout Creek damaged the building in the mid-1950s, the church abandoned it. It also survived a fire in the mid-1970s. A newly formed local library district was created to restore it for use as a library. In 1986 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. Building The chapel is a one-story two-by-five-bay building with a rectangular chancel. Its walls are uncoursed cement rock rubble laid in Rosendale cement, with some embellishments and flourishes at windows and doors. A fire in the mid-1970s required the replacement of much of the original interior decoration, although the original wood ceiling is intact. All but two of the stained-glass windows had to b ...
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All Saints' Chapel (Sewanee)
All Saints Chapel (or All Saints' Chapel) may refer to: *All Saints Chapel, Instow, a combined Church of England chapel and community centre in Instow, Devon, England *All Saints Chapel and Morris Family Burial Ground, in Morris, Otsego County, New York, listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) *All Saints' Chapel (Rosendale, New York), listed on the NRHP * All Saints' Chapel (Sewanee), located on the campus of Sewanee: The University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee *All Saints Chapel, Somerford, a chapel of ease attached to Somerford Hall, Cheshire, England * Royal Chapel of All Saints, a church in the grounds of Windsor Great Park, Berkshire, England See also *All Saints Church (other) All Saints Church, or All Saints' Church or variations on the name may refer to: Albania *All Saints' Church, Himarë Australia *All Saints Church, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory * All Saints Anglican Church, Henley Brook, Western Austr ... * All Saints Epi ...
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The University Of The South
The University of the South, familiarly known as Sewanee (), is a private Episcopal liberal arts college in Sewanee, Tennessee. It is owned by 28 southern dioceses of the Episcopal Church, and its School of Theology is an official seminary of the church. The university's School of Letters offers graduate degrees in American Literature and Creative Writing. The campus (officially called "The Domain" or, affectionately, "The Mountain") consists of of scenic mountain property atop the Cumberland Plateau, with the developed portion occupying about . History Beginning in the 1830s Bishop James Otey of Tennessee led an effort to found an Episcopal seminary in the Deep South. Following the Mexican War the Episcopal Church saw tremendous growth in the region, and a real need for an institution "to train natives, for natives" as Otey put it arose. Up to that point only the Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia existed south of the Mason-Dixon Line and other den ...
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