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View history; General ... East Broad Street Presbyterian Church. March 17, 1987 ... Holy Cross Church, Rectory and School. April 26, 1979 ...
First Congregational Church: More images: 444 E. Broad Street 846-82 May 10, 1982 Yes, #100007182: November 29, 2021 CR-5 Central Presbyterian Church: More images: 132 S. Third Street 1005-82 June 7, 1982 Yes, #8300197: January 11, 1983 Now known as Second Presbyterian Church CR-6 Trinity Episcopal Church: More images: 125 E. Broad Street 1081 ...
The site was previously the location of the first public school in Columbus, built in 1826. [3] The building was acquired by Columbus Association for the Performing Arts in 2013, and is being repurposed as a performance venue. CAPA CEO William Conner Jr. said the church building is "acoustically near perfect". [4]
Saint Mary of the Assumption Catholic Church; Saint Paul's Episcopal Church (Columbus, Ohio) Samuel Landes House; Schlee Brewery Historic District; Schlee-Kemmler Building; Scofield-Sanor House; Second Presbyterian Church (Columbus, Ohio) Seneca Hotel; Sharp-Page House; Shedd-Dunn House; Shiloh Baptist Church (Columbus, Ohio) The Short North
East Broad Street Presbyterian Church is a historic church at 760 E. Broad Street in the King-Lincoln Bronzeville neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio. It was built in 1887 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987. [2] The church was originally designed in the Richardsonian Romanesque style by architect Elah Terrell.
The records and alumni of Ohio Central College were assumed by Muskingum College. The campus buildings were used as a school for the blind until they burned in a fire. The only remaining structure of Ohio Central College is the Iberia Presbyterian Church, which served as the college chapel in the 1800s.
Category:Presbyterian churches in Ohio is for all present or former Presbyterian churches in Ohio Wikimedia Commons has media related to Presbyterian churches in Ohio . Subcategories
The abolitionists decided to leave the Second Presbyterian Church in Columbus to found their own Congregational community. Thus 42 people transferred church membership on September 24, 1852. Their first church was a frame chapel at the northeast corner of Third Street and Lynn Alley. It was built using a $1,000 loan from the Second Presbyterian ...