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Schoenstein organ in St. Martin's Episcopal Church, Houston, Texas. An expansion took place in 1984, adding an Education Building, Library, and Choir Hall. In 1986, an activity center was opened. By the 1990s, the church had become one of the largest Episcopal churches in the United States, and by 2002, had grown to more than 7,000 members.
St. Martin's Episcopal Church can refer to many churches in the United States: St. Martin's Episcopal Church (Houston, Texas), attended by George H.W. Bush and Barbara Bush; St. Martin's Episcopal Church (Showell, Maryland) St. Martin's Episcopal Church (New York City), a designated New York City Landmark
1845 building, now housing the Bible Presbyterian Church of Marcus Hook. St. Martin's Church is an Episcopal church founded in 1699 in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, United States. It is located at 22 Church Street, only 500 feet from the Delaware River. It is one of the earliest and last riverfront churches in Pennsylvania. [1]
St. Martin of Tours Episcopal Church, Omaha, Nebraska St. Martin's Church (Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania) Saint Martin of Tours Parish Roman Catholic Church , Oxford Circle, Philadelphia , Pennsylvania
St. Martin's Church is a historic Episcopal Church (United States) church at 50 Orchard Avenue in Providence, Rhode Island. It is located next door to Temple Beth-El, a Reform Synagogue. It is located next door to Temple Beth-El, a Reform Synagogue.
St. Martin's Episcopal School was founded in 1947 as a co-educational, independent school. It was the first Episcopal school in the region and operated originally as a parish elementary school on the grounds of its namesake church. It moved to the current campus on Green Acres Road in 1950 to accommodate the growing number of students.
St. James's Episcopal Church is the third oldest Episcopal congregation in Richmond, Virginia. Only the older St. John's Episcopal Church on Church Hill also remains an active congregation. The parish takes as its motto, emblazoned above the altar: "Be ye doers of the Word and not hearers only," ascribed to early Christian bishop James the Just ...
St. Mark's Episcopal Church, also known as St. Mark's, Capitol Hill, is a historic Episcopal church located at 3rd and A Streets, Southeast in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Built 1888–1894, the church is an example of Gothic Revival and Romanesque Revival architectures.