Grace Memorial Episcopal Church (Wabasha, Minnesota)
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Grace Memorial Episcopal Church (Wabasha, Minnesota)
The Grace Memorial Episcopal Church is a historic church in Wabasha, Minnesota, United States, built in 1900. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 for having local significance in the themes of architecture and religion. It was nominated for being "the most distinguished ecclesiastical structure" in Wabasha and "the work of prominent Minnesota architect Cass Gilbert". Description Grace Memorial Episcopal Church is a one-story building on a modified Cruciform#Cruciform architectural plan, cruciform plan. It was designed in the style of English Gothic architecture, with walls of random course (architecture), coursed stone. The main gable ends have stone coping (architecture), coping topped by Celtic crosses at the peaks. The roof is of slate. There are two projecting gables on the main façade that contain doors. The gable at the main entrance has a decorated bargeboard, a Gothic arch, and a belfry (architecture), belfry. The gable ove ...
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Wabasha, Minnesota
Wabasha is a city and the county seat of Wabasha County, Minnesota, Wabasha County, Minnesota. The population was 2,559 at the time of the 2020 United States Census, 2020 census. It is on the Mississippi River, near its confluence with the Zumbro River. Name Wabasha is named after the Mdewakanton Dakota people, Dakota mixed-blood (with Anishinaabe) chiefs Wapi-sha, or red leaf (''wáȟpe šá'' - leaf red), Wapasha I, father (1718–1806), Wapasha II, son (1768–1855), and grandson (±1816–1876) of the same name. The second, Wapasha II, Wabishaw the son, signed the 1830 USA treaty with the "Confederated Tribes of the Sacs and Foxes; the Medawah-Kanton, Wahpacoota, Wahpeton and Sissetong Bands or Tribes of Sioux; the Omahas, Ioways, Ottoes and Missourias" in Prairie du Chien. The grandson, Wabasha III (±1816–1876), signed the 1851 and 1858 treaties that ceded the southern half of what is now the state of Minnesota to the United States, beginning the removal of his band to the ...
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