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Fan tracery ceiling. Francis D. Lee, a Charleston architect and church member, was hired in 1852 to enlarge and remodel the building.Inspired by architecture such as is seen in the Chapel of Henry VII at Westminster Abbey and St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle, Lee completed the project two years later in partnership with Edward C, Jones, a local architect with more experience then Lee.
Location of Charleston in South Carolina. ... Coming Street Cemetery. November 5, 1996 ... Unitarian Church. November 7, 1973 ...
He is buried in the cemetery of the Unitarian Church in Charleston, which is located a short distance from the Meeting House and was formed by the Society of Dissenters who needed more space and built a second building to complement the Meeting House. [14] A commemorative inscription there reads: [15]
Old St. Andrew's Parish Church; St. Mary of the Annunciation Catholic Church (Charleston, South Carolina) St. Michael's Anglican Church (Charleston, South Carolina) St. Philip's Church (Charleston, South Carolina) Simmons-Edwards House; South Carolina State Arsenal; James Sparrow House; Standard Oil Company Headquarters; Stiles-Hinson House
Coming Street Cemetery (2010) in Charleston, Charleston County; established by the city's Jewish community in 1762 Magnolia Cemetery in Charleston, Charleston County. Coming Street Cemetery in Charleston; NRHP-listed; Cook's Old Field Cemetery near Mount Pleasant; NRHP-listed; Charleston Cemeteries Historic District in Charleston, complex ...
The Charleston Cemeteries Historic District encompasses a cluster of 23 cemeteries north of downtown Charleston, South Carolina.Laid out on either side of Huguenin Street in the northern part of peninsular Charleston, they were laid out between 1849 and 1956, and represented a concentrated diversity in funerary art and cemetery landscape design practices.
Built in 1750s, Charleston's oldest church building 64: St. Philip's Episcopal Church: ... Unitarian Church: Unitarian Church. November 7, 1973 Charleston ...
The Circular Congregational Church is a historic church building at 150 Meeting Street in Charleston, South Carolina, used by a congregation established in 1681.Its parish house, the Parish House of the Circular Congregational Church, is a highly significant Greek Revival architectural work by Robert Mills and is recognized as a U.S. National Historic Landmark.