Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Stubbings House mansion was very briefly the home of Guy Carleton, 1st Baron Dorchester, the Governor of Quebec and later, during World War II, of Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands. Another notable resident from 1947 to 1969 was physicist Sir Thomas Merton inventor of the "one-shilling rangefinder" which brought down flying bombs at a range ...
Ambler was the second son of Humphry Ambler (~1681–1745) barrister of Stubbings Park Maidenhead [1] and Bream's Buildings Chancery Lane, and his wife Ann, daughter of Charles Bream (~1662–1713) timber merchant of Bridewell and Bream's Buildings. Charles's crippled (by a fall when aged eight) epileptic elder brother, Humphry, died of a ...
St. Paul's Chapel, on the Morningside Heights campus of Columbia University in Manhattan, New York City, is an Episcopal church built in 1903–07 and designed by I. N. Phelps Stokes, of the firm of Howells & Stokes. The exterior is in the Northern Italian Renaissance Revival style while the interior is Byzantine. [1]
Rockingham Meeting House: 1787-1801 2000 Rockingham, VT: Vernacular: Congregational: Cathedral of San Carlos Borromeo: 1791–95 1960 Monterey, CA: Spanish Colonial: Roman Catholic: Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine: 1793–97 1970 St. Augustine, FL: Spanish Colonial: Roman Catholic: Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo: 1797 1960 Carmel-by ...
St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, 1928 Concordia Lutheran Church, Louisville, Kentucky , 1930 Knowles Memorial Chapel , on the campus of Rollins College , Winter Park, Florida , 1931–32
St. Paul's Chapel usually refers to a church in New York City built in the 18th century. St. Paul's Chapel or Chapel of St Paul may also refer to: Chapel of Saint Paul, Damascus, Syria; St. Paul's Chapel (Columbia University), United States, built in the early 20th century
In 1966, St. Paul's celebrated its centenary with a liturgy of Consecration. [14] On 5 October 2008, the newly expanded parish hall from 1958 was dedicated by the Bishop of Washington, John Chane. The new parish house incorporated the Gray and Carwithen townhouses that were adjacent to the church.
St. Paul's Chapel is a chapel building of Trinity Church, an episcopal parish, located at 209 Broadway, between Fulton Street and Vesey Street, in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Built in 1766, it is the oldest surviving church building in Manhattan [ 4 ] and one of the nation's most well renowned examples of Late Georgian church architecture.