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Ascension Parish St. Bridget Church, 1 Percival St, Maynard [13] Our Lady of Fatima Church, 160 Concord Rd, Sudbury [13] Catholic Parishes of Lexington Sacred Heart Church, 6 Follen Rd, Lexington: Founded as a mission for Italian immigrants in 1927, current church dedicated in 1949. Now part of Catholic Parishes of Lexington [155]
First Parish of Sudbury refers to both an historic meetinghouse and a Unitarian Universalist congregation in Sudbury, Massachusetts, United States. The meetinghouse was built in 1797 on the site of the first meetinghouse built on the west side on the Sudbury River. [1] The meetinghouse was designed by Captain Thomson and built at a cost of ...
The Church of the Ascension is a historic Episcopal church building located at 160 Rock Street in Fall River, Massachusetts. It was completed in 1875 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. It is also located within the Lower Highlands Historic District. As of 2008, the parish is now known as the Church of the Holy Spirit ...
Along Sudbury Aqueduct from Farm Pond at Waverly St. (Framingham) to Chestnut Hill Reservoir (Newton) 42°17′33″N 71°18′44″W / 42.2925°N 71.312222°W / 42.2925; -71.312222 ( Sudbury Aqueduct Linear
Sudbury, MA: MA 1640 Congregational/United Church of Christ: Established in 1640, the first meeting house built in 1643 in Wayland, MA. Moved to Sudbury in 1708. Current location and name established February 17, 1890. Saint Ignatius Church: Chapel Point / Port Tobacco, Maryland: MD 1641 Catholic Oldest continually active Catholic parish in the ...
Sudbury's First Parish Church. The First Parish of Sudbury gathered in 1640 east of the Sudbury River (present day Wayland). "East parish" (now First Parish of Wayland) moved its present site and "West parish" moved to the present site, called Rocky Plains (now Sudbury town center), upon Rev. Israel Loring first preaching there May 6, 1722. [41]
Paroisse Ste-Anne-des-Pins is a Roman Catholic Church that emerged in downtown Sudbury, Ontario, Canada in 1883.The epoch-making edifice held high communal value and admiration from the time of its erection, as it was home to the city’s very first Francophone Catholic community. [1]
Wayland was the first settlement of Sudbury Plantation in 1638. The residents of what is now Sudbury split away in 1722 and formed into the western parish, while residents of what is now Wayland formed into the eastern parish. Prior to the American Revolution Sudbury had one of the largest militias in Massachusetts