Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. Helen's Brockton, Toronto: 1875 Gothic Revival: Portuguese St. James Runnymede: 1920 Modernist St. Jane Frances Jane and Finch: 1970 Modernist Served by Franciscan Friars: St. Joan of Arc near High Park: 1919, 1966 Modernist Original church built 1919 at Dundas St W and Edna Ave. Move to Bloor St in 1966 because of subway construction. St ...
Merged with Glen Rhodes United Church, building now home to Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto: St. Andrew's United Church: Downtown 1949 Merger of Old St. Andrew's United Church (from 1830) and Westminster (Yorkville Canada Presbyterian 1860)- Central (Yorkville Methodist 1841) in former Westminster (1892, gutted by fire 1922) building.
The church originated from St. Andrew's Church, which was founded in 1830 as the first Church of Scotland congregation in what was then the town of York. The original St. Andrew's was located at the corner of Adelaide and Church Streets. By the 1870s, it had become clear that a new church building was needed.
The congregation was one of the most active in opposition to the union that saw the majority of Canadian Presbyterian churches join the United Church of Canada in 1925. The St. Andrew's congregation, under the leadership of the Rev. Dr. Stuart C. Parker, voted 94% (19-733) against joining the new church.
St. John's, York Mills, is a historic Anglican church in the York Mills neighborhood of the North York district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Founded in 1816, it is the second oldest Anglican church in Toronto. The present Gothic Revival church building dates from 1843 and was designed by architect John George Howard.
St. Margaret Anglican Church, New Toronto Etobicoke Founded 1906 St. Margaret Anglican Church, North Toronto North Toronto St. Mark and Calvary Anglican Church Corso d'Italia: St. Martin-in-the-Fields Anglican Church: High Park North: Founded 1890 Anglo-Catholic St. Mary Magdalene Anglican Church: Downtown Founded 1888 Anglo-Catholic
St. Michael's Cathedral is located to the northwest of Church and Shuter streets in Toronto, with the parish office at 200 Church Street. The building is oriented on an off-east–west axis aligned perpendicular to Church Street, with the main entrance on its west side located at 65 Bond Street.
Sketch of the second church building from Landmarks of Toronto (1904) The Church of St. John the Evangelist, also known as St. John's Garrison Church or the Garrison Church, was an Anglican church in downtown Toronto, Ontario. Founded in 1844, the congregation had three church buildings before being disbanded in 1985.