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Gardner, Kansas: First Presbyterian Church (Girard, Kansas) 1888 built 2009 NRHP-listed 202 N. Summit: Girard, Kansas: Romanesque First Presbyterian Church (Hays, Kansas) 1879 built 1973 NRHP-listed 100 W. 7th St.
First Presbyterian Church (Fort Scott, Kansas) First Presbyterian Church (Gardner, Kansas) First Presbyterian Church (Girard, Kansas) First Presbyterian Church (Hays, Kansas) First Presbyterian Church of Abilene; First Presbyterian Church, Leavenworth
First Presbyterian Church (Charlotte, North Carolina) First Presbyterian Church (Durham, North Carolina) First Presbyterian Church (Fayetteville, North Carolina) First Presbyterian Church (Franklin, North Carolina) First Presbyterian Church (Goldsboro, North Carolina) First Presbyterian Church (Hickory, North Carolina)
In 1890, helped fund a new brick Gothic Revival church building with a seventy-foot tower. [1] [2] In 1916, the church hired the architects Milburn and Heister, who built the Carolina Theatre, to design a new Gothic Revival building. [1] [3] In 1922, a parsonage was added to the east of the church. [1]
Presbyterians trace their history to the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century. The Presbyterian heritage, and much of its theology, began with the French theologian and lawyer John Calvin (1509–1564), whose writings solidified much of the Reformed tradition that came before him in the form of the sermons and writings of Huldrych Zwingli.
The church, originally called West Durham Presbyterian Church was built on 13th Street (also called Presbyterian Street) in 1905. [1] [2] In 1916, the church was renamed Blacknall Memorial in honor of Dr. Richard Blacknall Sr. and his son, Richard Blacknall Jr. [1] The Blacknall family were prominent members of the West Durham community; Richard Blacknall Sr. owned Blacknall's Drugstore and ...
Presbyterianism is a Reformed (Calvinist) Protestant tradition named for its form of church government by representative assemblies of elders. [2] Though other Reformed churches are structurally similar, the word Presbyterian is applied to churches that trace their roots to the Church of Scotland or to English Dissenter groups that formed during the English Civil War.
The church was referred to as Pearl Mill Chapel from 1902 to 1903 and then as Second Presbyterian Church. [1] On May 16, 1921, seventy people attended a revival service and reorganized congregation as Trinity Avenue Presbyterian Church, appointing George L. Cooper as the first full-time minister. [1]