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Former Morningside Parish Church, on the corner of Newbattle Terrace and Morningside Road. Opened in 1838, this was the first permanent church in Morningside. [3] It closed in 1990 after amalgamating with the Braid Church. The building is now used by Edinburgh Napier University. St Peter's Church, 77 Falcon Avenue. A Roman Catholic parish church.
St Peter's Church is a parish of the Roman Catholic Church in the Morningside district of Edinburgh, Scotland, within the Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh. The parish church , designed by Sir Robert Lorimer , was built from 1906 to 1907, and the nave was extended from 1928 to 1929.
Church Hill Theatre is a Category B listed pink sandstone former church and current theatre venue owned by the Edinburgh City Council. Built originally as Morningside Free Church, the council purchased it in 1960. [1] After undergoing an extensive refurbishment, it re-opened in August 2006. [2] It is managed by the team operating the Assembly ...
A short distance away atop Church Hill is the Church Hill Theatre which was built as a church by Edinburgh architect Hippolyte Blanc (who also designed Christ Church). Not far beyond that is the former Morningside Parish Church (Church of Scotland) which is now owned by Chalmers Church having been used by Napier University in the interim, the ...
Edinburgh: Morningside 11,302 Morningside Church, Edinburgh 1838 1-090: Edinburgh: St Cuthbert's 2,786 St Cuthbert's, Edinburgh: Medieval 1-048: Edinburgh: Gorgie and Palmerston Place 20,961 Gorgie Dalry Stenhouse Church 1885 1-074: Palmerston Place Church, Edinburgh 1821 1-104: Edinburgh: Slateford Longstone 4,338 Slateford Longstone Church ...
It lies immediately to the north of Morningside and south of Bruntsfield; technically it is part of Burghmuirhead, together with Holy Corner. All of Burghmuirhead was once part of the lands of Greenhill. The original Burghmuirhead House remains at the end of a lane on the west side of Morningside Road near Church Hill (the street) itself.
Former Morningside Parish Church, Edinburgh. He was born in Greenlaw, Berwickshire on 8 April 1814. He studied Theology at Edinburgh University and Divinity Hall in Edinburgh. [1] From around 1835 he operated as an urban missionary in North Leith, the harbour area of Edinburgh. [2]
In 1887 he translated to the West Free Church in Rothesay and finally in 1890 he settled at the newly built South Morningside Free Church on Braid Road in Edinburgh. [3] Salmond was the first minister of this spectacular church, designed by Sir Robert Rowand Anderson. [4] [5] In Edinburgh he lived very close to the church at 9 Cluny Drive. [6]