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Holy Trinity High School is a private, Roman Catholic high school in Winsted, Minnesota, United States. It is located in the Roman Catholic Diocese of New Ulm.
The Howard Lake–Waverly–Winsted school district [10] is the public school system which operates Winsted Elementary. The Catholic school system is made up of Holy Trinity High School, Holy Trinity Elementary School, and Tiny Trojans pre-school. [11] The Winsted Public Library is part of the Pioneerland Library System. [12]
The Church of the Most Holy Trinity in Veseli, Minnesota (an unincorporated community in Wheatland Township, Minnesota) is a Catholic church designed by Clarence H. Johnston, Sr. Johnston designed a large number buildings for state institutions in Minnesota, such as the Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf, the University of Minnesota, the former Minnesota Historical Society building, and many ...
A new church was erected on the corner of Chemeketa and Cottage Streets and was named St. Joseph Church (per the archdiocese history of Oregon the name change was possibly to avoid confusion with another parish named St. John's [7]) and opened in 1889. The parish's current church was dedicated in 1953. A new parish center was completed in 1999.
The Walker's Point settlement was founded in the 1830s. Many of the early settlers were German-speaking Catholics - many with roots in southern Germany and Austria. [3] In the late 1840s, Father Salzmann of St. Mary's Church began organizing those German-speaking Catholics of the south side into Holy Trinity parish.
The Methodist Episcopal Church of Salem was established in 1841 when the Methodist Mission moved its headquarters to Salem. [5] Jason Lee was one of the 13 charter members of the church, and David Leslie was the first pastor. [5] Initially the church met in a room at the Oregon Institute. [5]
The center of main facade is dominated by a tower that is initially square, but is topped by an octagonal belfry section and an onion dome with a cross-shaped spire. The facade is flanked by small square towers topped by onion domes. Behind the church stands a Colonial Revival rectory building that was built several years after the church. [3]
Located on State Street in downtown Salem, [10] the structure rises 151 feet (46 m) to the top of its parapet wall, and contains eleven floors. [5] [11] Classified as the only high-rise building in Salem, [12] it is the third tallest building in the city after the Salem First United Methodist Church (188 feet tall) and the Oregon State Capitol (173 feet tall). [13]