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151 N Warren St, Trenton: Divine Mercy 215 Adeline St, Trenton Our Lady of the Angels 540 Chestnut Ave, Trenton Sacred Heart Church, Trenton: Trenton St. Anthony 626 S Olden Ave, Trenton St. Basil Romanian 238 Adeline St, Trenton St. Hedwig 872 Brunswick Ave, Trenton St. James 11 E Paul Ave, Trenton St. Joachim 20 Butler St, Trenton St. Josaphat
Pages in category "Churches in Trenton, New Jersey" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C.
The Diocese of Trenton is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory, or diocese, of the Catholic Church in central New Jersey in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Newark. The mother church of the Diocese of Trenton is the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption in Trenton.
Established in 1703, St. Michael's Church in downtown Trenton, Mercer County, New Jersey, United States, is a founding parish of the Episcopal Diocese of New Jersey.Its present building located at 140 North Warren Street was built in 1747–1748, and was renovated in 1810 and 1847–1848.
First Presbyterian Church is a historic church located at 120 East State Street in Trenton, Mercer County, New Jersey, United States.The church's first congregation got together in 1712 and their first church was built in 1726. [3]
Sacred Heart Church (Trenton, New Jersey) St. Catharine Church, Spring Lake; St. Mary of the Lakes Catholic Church; Saint Mary School, Bordentown; St. Rose High School; St. Paul's School (New Jersey) Stuart Country Day School
St. Mary's was the second Catholic parish established in Trenton after St. John's, which was located on the present site of Sacred Heart Church on South Broad Street. [2] Ground was broken for the parish church on April 23, 1866, and it was dedicated on January 1, 1871, by Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley of Newark .
By 1915 Bishop Scarborough was dead and the Rt. Rev. Paul Matthews replaced him. Bishop Matthews saw the need for cathedral works, but not for a cathedra. However, he accepted the offer of the vestry of Christ Church in Trenton of their church as a pro-cathedral. He believed in this way people could visualize the diocesan and cathedral work. [1]