Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The present Saint Ignatius Church is the fifth such church to be built in San Francisco. Its history runs parallel to that of USF and St. Ignatius College Prep: the very first Saint Ignatius was built in 1855 as a small wood-frame church beside a schoolhouse that became Saint Ignatius Academy, USF's predecessor.
Gothic Revival church built in 1854. It is a San Francisco landmark [24] St. Boniface 133 Golden Gate Ave. 1860 [25] St. Patrick: 756 Mission St. 1851 Church rebuilt after 1906 San Francisco Earthquake. It is San Francisco Historic Landmark #4 [26] Sts. Peter and Paul: 666 Filbert St. 1884 Known as the Italian Cathedral of the West, completed ...
The cathedral's clock and the admonitory phrase beneath it. The Old Cathedral of St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception is a proto-cathedral and parish of the Roman Catholic Church located at 660 California Street at the corner of Grant Avenue in the Chinatown neighborhood of San Francisco, California.
The Archdiocese of San Francisco (Latin: Archdiœcesis Sancti Francisci; Spanish: Arquidiócesis de San Francisco) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or diocese of the Catholic Church in the northern California region of the United States.
Saint Ignatius Church (San Francisco), California St. Ignatius Loyola Church (Denver, Colorado) Saint Ignatius Church, Baltimore, Maryland; St. Ignatius Church (Forest Hill, Maryland), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Harford County, Maryland
It is the mother church of the Catholic faithful in the California counties of Marin, San Francisco and San Mateo and is the metropolitan cathedral for the Ecclesiastical province of San Francisco. The cathedral is located in the Cathedral Hill neighborhood of San Francisco. The present cathedral replaced one (1891–1962) of the same name.
St. Joseph's Church and Complex is a historic church built in 1906, and located at 1401–1415 Howard Street in the South of Market neighborhood of San Francisco, California, United States. [3] [4] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 15, 1982; and added to the list of San Francisco Designated Landmarks on October ...
The new church was dedicated on May 29, 1911 by Archbishop Patrick W. Riordan. The church required seismic reinforcement after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. At one point, the archdiocese seriously considered closing St. Paul's because of the potential costs of reinforcing the church and adjacent buildings; this decision was later reversed.