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12601 Shaker Blvd, Cleveland Founded in 1916, church dedicated in 1951 [13] Sagrada Familia 7719 Detroit Ave, Cleveland Founded and church dedicated in 1998 [14] Shrine Church of St. Stanislaus: 3649 E. 65th St, Cleveland Founded in the 1880s for Polish immigrants, church dedicated in 1891. Was designated a parish shrine in 2004 [15] St. Adalbert
The first Catholic church to serve Cleveland's burgeoning Czech community was St. Wenceslas Church, constructed in 1867 [23] at the intersection of E. 35th Street and Burwell Avenue [27] (a block north-northwest of E. 37th and Croton). [e] The Croton Czech settlement remained the center of Czech life in Cleveland until the late 1870s.
As of 2023, the diverse church had about 125 members. [5] The church "also serves many visitors seeking meals, music, and community" in addition to after-school tutoring, practice space for the South Loop Symphony Orchestra, and a basketball gymnasium. [5]
The Chicago Loop Synagogue is an Orthodox Jewish synagogue, located at 16 South Clark Street, in the Loop precinct of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States. Completed in 1958, [ 3 ] the synagogue is renowned for a stained glass artwork by Abraham Rattner .
Broadway–Slavic Village is a neighborhood on the Southeast side of Cleveland, Ohio. One of the city's oldest neighborhoods, it originated as the township of Newburgh, first settled in 1799. [4] [5] Much of the area has historically served as home to Cleveland's original Czech and Polish immigrants.
Erected by 40 Czech cultural societies in 1896, this building, a mix of Renaissance Revival and Romanesque Revival architecture designed by the local firm of Steffens & Searles, was designed to serve the cultural, political, and social needs of Cleveland's Czech community. (At the time, Cleveland had the fourth-largest Czech population of any ...
Only Cleveland (17,034), Brooklyn–Ohio City (6,275), East Cleveland (2,313), and Bedford (1,953) were larger population centers. [77] The vast majority of workers in Newburgh Township were agricultural laborers, with a few individuals employed in ways that supported agriculture: blacksmiths, carpenters, shoemakers, and wagon makers. [79]
United States historic place South Dearborn Street – Printing House Row North Historic District U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S. National Historic Landmark District Chicago Landmark The Manhattan Building (far right), the Fisher Building (far left), and the Old Colony Building (middle-left), three of the four buildings in the district. Show map of Chicago metropolitan area Show ...