Trinity Episcopal Church (Washington, D
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Washington, D
Trinity Episcopal Church may refer to various buildings and their congregations in the United States: Alabama * Trinity Episcopal Church (Mobile, Alabama), 1845, the first large Gothic Revival church built in Alabama Arkansas * Trinity Episcopal Church (Pine Bluff, Arkansas), 1866, also known as St. John's Parish * Trinity Episcopal Church (Searcy, Arkansas), 1902 California * Trinity Episcopal Church (Santa Barbara, California), 1866 Delaware * Trinity Episcopal Church (Wilmington, Delaware), 1890 District of Columbia * Trinity Episcopal Church (Washington, D.C.), 1851, razed in 1936 Florida * Trinity Episcopal Church (Apalachicola, Florida), 1839, originally known as Christ Church * Trinity Episcopal Church (Melrose, Florida), 1886, an historic Carpenter Gothic Episcopal church * Trinity Parish (St. Augustine, Florida), 1834, the oldest Protestant church in Florida Georgia * Trinity Episcopal Church (Columbus, Georgia), 1891 Idaho * Trinity Episcopal Church (Gooding, Id ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Mobile, Alabama)
Trinity Episcopal Church is a historic church in Mobile, Alabama, United States. It was the first large Gothic Revival church built in Alabama. The building was designed by architects Frank Wills and Henry Dudley. History Trinity Episcopal Church was established in 1845, as the second Episcopal congregation in Mobile. Christ Church Cathedral was the first. The cornerstone for the building was placed on April 8, 1853. A yellow fever outbreak swept through the city in that year and the church's register shows that the rector conducted 49 funerals in September 1853. This appears to have delayed construction, but the building was finally completed in 1857. It was located at the corner of St. Anthony and Jackson Streets until it was moved to Dauphin Street in 1945. Hurricane Frederic damaged the building in 1979. It removed a portion of the roofing, broke windows, and damaged the spire. All of this damage was repaired, with steel reinforcement added to the rebuilt spire. It ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Fort Wayne, Indiana)
Trinity Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal congregation and church, designed by Toledo, Ohio architect Charles Crosby Miller and constructed ca. 1865 in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The congregation was organized in 1839 as Christ Church and the name changed in 1844 to Trinity Church. The first church was built on the southeast corner of Berry and Harrison Streets in 1848. It is an example of Gothic Revival architecture. ''Note:'' This includes , , and Accompanying photographs It 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 1978. HISTORY The Rt. Rev. Jackson Kemper, Bishop of the Northwest, visited Fort Wayne for the first time in 1837 in an effort to organize a church. Two years later, he set the Rev. Benjamin Hutchi ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Detroit)
Trinity Episcopal Church is located at 1519 Martin Luther King Boulevard in the Woodbridge Historic District of Detroit, Michigan. The church was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1979 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. It is now known as Spirit of Hope. History The Epiphany Reformed Episcopal parish was founded in 1878 as a place where Anglicans not pledged to the Episcopal bishop of Michigan might worship.Trinity Episcopal Church/ Spirit of Hope
from Detroit1701.org
In 1880, the congregation built a small frame church, and in 1889 changed their name to Trinity Episcopal. James E. Scripps, owner of



Trinity Episcopal Church (Caro, Michigan)
Trinity Episcopal Church (also known as Trinity Nazarene Church) is a historic church building at 106 Joy Street in Caro, Michigan, in Tuscola County in the Thumb region. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. History The Trinity Episcopal Church congregation was organized in 1871. The congregation held services intermittently, and it was not until 1877 that they were organized and had regular services and a pastor. The congregation began planning to build this church in 1880.Marcia M. Dievendorf, Patricia E. Frazer, & Mark O. Keller, ''The Caro Area'' (Arcadia, 2011), p. 66. Construction began in 1881, and the church was completed before Christmas. The church thrived for many years, but in the 1920s the Episcopal congregation dwindled, and the church disbanded in 1929. The building was sold in 1934 to the Church of the Nazarene, which had been founded in 1916. This congregation occupied the church until 1974, when they constructed a new chu ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Lewiston, Maine)
Trinity Episcopal Church is an historic church building at 247 Bates Street in Lewiston, Maine. It is a modestly sized yet handsomely decorated Gothic Revival building, designed by C.C. Haight of New York City and completed in 1882. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. Architecture and history The Trinity Episcopal Church building stands at the southwest corner of Spruce and Bates Streets in downtown Lewiston, just south of Kennedy Park. It is a single-story stone structure laid out in a cruciform plan, with granite walls and a slate roof. A square tower with a belfry and hipped spire rises at the center of the cross, and a secondary gabled entrance vestibule projects north from the rear of the nave. Windows are generally narrow lancet-arched Gothic windows, with circular rose windows in some of the larger gables. The Trinity Church parish was organized in 1854, and built its first dedicate sanctuary at Ash and Park Streets in 1859. A ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Melrose, Massachusetts)
The Trinity Episcopal Church is a historic church at 131 W. Emerson Street in Melrose, Massachusetts. The main church building was constructed in 1886 to a design by Boston architect Charles Brigham. It is connected to its parish house, built in 1936 with a significant addition in 1956. The main building is English Revival (Tudor) in styling. Its walls are made of multiple colors of granite, and are topped by a steeply pitched slate roof. There is a large projecting gable section on the southern facade, which, along with the tower in the southeastern corner, has the half-timber styling typical of the Tudor Revival. The eastern facade has a projecting curved section, which houses the apse on the interior; it is from this section that the church is connected to the parish house via the somewhat utilitarian 1956 addition. The parish house was designed in Shingle Style by Boston architect and parish member William H. Smith, although with sympathy to the Tudor styling of the chu ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Lenox, Massachusetts)
Trinity Episcopal Church is an historic Episcopal church building at 88 Walker Street in Lenox, Massachusetts. Built in 1888 for a congregation organized in 1793, it is a prominent local example of Romanesque architecture, funded by Gilded Age summer congregants. The church was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. History The first known Episcopalian church services to take place in Lenox were in 1763; it was not until 1793 that a congregation was organized. Its first building, similar to a typical colonial meeting house, was built in 1818, and survives in somewhat altered form as a commercial building on Church Street. The congregation remained small until after the American Civil War, when wealthy residents of large cities began summering in Lenox. The church was enlarged in 1873, but by 1882 it was again judged too small. Robert Auchmuty, a congregant who had apprenticed with architect James Renwick, Jr., headed the committee that oversaw design ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Cheyneyville, Louisiana)
Trinity Episcopal Church is located in Cheneyville, Louisiana. Description and history The church is located in Rapides Parish on the east bank of Bayou Boeuf in a semi–rural setting. The brick building is a five bay basilica. The church is one of twelve examples of late 19th century Gothic Revival architecture buildings that remain in Louisiana. It was added to 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 ... on October 16, 1980. References External links * * Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in Louisiana Gothic Revival church buildings in Louisiana Churches completed in 1860 19th-century Episcopal church buildings Churches in Rapides Parish, Louisiana National Register of Historic Places in Rapides ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Owensboro, Kentucky)
The Trinity Episcopal Church in Owensboro, Kentucky, is a historic church at 403 W. 5th Street. It was added to 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 1972. Also known as Old Trinity Episcopal Church, it was built in 1875 and is deemed " a good example of the English influence on early church architecture in the United States." With . The church was in regular use until 1964 when the parish built a new building, the "New Trinity Episcopal Church", at 720 Ford Avenue. As of early 1972, the building was in use by the Cliff Hagan's Boys Club, which was to use it for a short time before another facility would become ready. References External linksTrinity Episcopal Church official site Episcopal church buildings in Ken ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Danville, Kentucky)
Trinity Episcopal Church in Danville, Kentucky, was one of the first churches organized in the Episcopal Diocese of Kentucky. Trinity Church is the oldest in-use church structure in Danville and the oldest continuously used Episcopal church building in the Episcopal Diocese of Lexington as well as the second oldest in Kentucky. It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. History The origin of the Episcopal church in Kentucky dates to 1796 when Christ Church in Lexington was organized. It wasn't until 1809, however, that the parish was formally established when the first vestry was elected. In 1822 a second Episcopal church was established in Louisville, it too being named Christ Church. The building, which is now Christ Church Cathedral, was completed in 1824. In 1829 Reverend George T. Chapman, rector of Lexington's Christ Church from 1820 to 1830, proposed the formation of a Diocese. In working towards this goal, Reverend Chapman visited Danville and organized a ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Covington, Kentucky)
Trinity Episcopal Church is located in Covington, Kentucky, Madison Avenue. This historic church was founded November 24, 1842, in a third floor of a brick building near the Covington market. The cornerstone of the first church was June 24, 1843 and the first service was on June 30, 1844. The church has served the people of Covington and Cincinnati, Ohio through wars and floods. The church is active today, with a large congregation at its Fourth and Madison Avenue location. The Rev. Peter D'Angio is the rector. It is the second largest parish in the Episcopal Diocese of Lexington. Trinity Episcopal Church was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 1, 1982. This was because it is an excellent example of how medieval techniques in architectural design affected Episcopal church building in the United States in the 19th Century, in a style known as Gothic Revival.TEC NRHP Form History Trinity Episcopal Church, a member of the Episcopal Diocese of Lexington, wa ...
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Trinity Episcopal Church (Atchison, Kansas)
Trinity Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church in Atchison, Kansas. The church building was constructed in 1866. Aviator Amelia Earhart was baptized in the church in 1897 and attended the church as a child. She was born nearby in the Amelia Earhart Birthplace. The building 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 1985. References External linksOfficial website Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in Kansas Episcopal church buildings in Kansas Churches in Atchison, Kansas National Register of Historic Places in Atchison County, Kansas {{Kansas-church-stub ...
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