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Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception (Portland, Maine) Our Lady Queen of Peace Church (Boothbay Harbor, Maine) All Saints Parish Our Lady, Queen of Peace Church, Boothbay Harbor (Lincoln) Saint Ambrose Church, Richmond (Sagadahoc) Saint Charles Borromeo Church, Brunswick; Saint John the Baptist Church, Brunswick; Saint Katharine Drexel Church ...
St. Peter's Catholic Church is a church located on Federal Street in downtown Portland, Maine, United States.Owned by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, the church was built in 1929, and—being in the city's Italian neighborhood centered on India Street—today hosts Italian cultural events, including the annual Italian Bazaar on the feast day of Saint Rocco. [1]
The Green Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church is a historic church at 46 Sheridan Street in Portland, Maine, United States. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story structure of textured concrete block masonry built in 1914 to house the congregation founded in 1891. The church is named after founder Moses Samuel Green, who was the city's wealthiest African American ...
Maine Irish Heritage Center St. Dominic's Church is an historic Catholic church building in Portland, Maine , located at the corner of Gray Street and State Street . When it was dedicated on August 11, 1833, it became the first Roman Catholic church in the city and the third in the state.
The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception is a historic cathedral on Cumberland Avenue in Portland, Maine, which serves as seat of the Diocese of Portland. The rector is Father Seamus Griesbach. [2] The church, an imposing Gothic Revival structure built in 1866–69, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. [1]
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The Williston-West Church and Parish House are an historic church and house at 32 Thomas Street in the West End neighborhood of Portland, Maine, United States. The church was built in 1897, and is a significant Gothic work by Francis H. Fassett. The parish house, built in 1905, was designed by John Calvin Stevens and John Howard Stevens.
Its first church building was built on Congress Street near Longfellow Square in the city's West End. By 1866 St. Luke's had grown to be the largest parish in the state and it was chosen to be the cathedral church for the diocese. The cornerstone for the cathedral church was laid on August 15 the following year. [2]