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In 1914, they merged as Central Presbyterian. [2] The church was built in 1902 and is a 1½-story, Romanesque Revival style brick building with a gable / hipped roof. It features a three-story, square corner tower with a pyramidal roof. [3]: 2 It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Presbyterian Church Building in 1984. [1]
Old Manse is a historic building at Miami University (Oxford, Ohio). Once nicknamed the “Coffee Mill House,” [1] Old Manse originally served as a residential estate and then as a manse for pastors. It later became a center for Presbyterian students and was sold by Oxford Presbyterian Church (USA) to become Miami University property in 1973. [2]
First Presbyterian Church (Napoleon, Ohio) First Presbyterian Church (Portsmouth, Ohio) First Presbyterian Church (Sandusky, Ohio) First Presbyterian Church (Troy, Ohio) First Presbyterian Church of Maumee; First Presbyterian Church of Wapakoneta; Fredericktown Presbyterian Church
Second Baptist Church (Mechanicsburg, Ohio) Second Presbyterian Church (Columbus, Ohio) Second Presbyterian Church (Portsmouth, Ohio) Shiloh Baptist Church (Cleveland, Ohio) Shrine Church of St. Stanislaus; South LeRoy Meetinghouse; St. Ann Roman Catholic Church Complex; Symmes Mission Chapel
Throughout the 19th-century, the church community grew so large that at various points in its history, daughter churches were formed in the nearby towns of Fairhaven (1835), Oxford (1837), College Corner (1849), and Morning Sun (1879). In 1915, because of the expansion of the four daughter churches, the Hopewell Church was shuttered.
Apostolic Faith Church of Oxford, United Pentecostal Church in Oxford [12] Bethel Gospel Church, The Holy Family Church, 1 Cuddesdon Way, Blackbird Leys; Cornerstone Church Assemblies of God, Quarry High Street, Headington, Oxford; Calvary Chapel, meets in Botley Primary school; Chinese Christian Church, 15 Gorse Leas; Christ Embassy Oxford ...
The Northgate Hall is the home of Oxford Presbyterian Church. [1] Situated at the 18 St Michael's Street, Oxford, England, the building is owned by Oxford City Council. It was built in 1870–71 as a United Methodist Free Church chapel and schools to the designs of J. C. Curtis.
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