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The cemetery is located beside the Chapel of the Intercession that Audubon co-founded in 1846, but this chapel is no longer part of Trinity parish. [4] James Renwick, Jr., is the architect of Trinity Church Cemetery and further updates were made by Calvert Vaux. [5] The uptown cemetery is also the center of the Heritage Rose District of New ...
The Chapel of the Intercession Complex and Trinity Cemetery is the joint name given in the National Register of Historic Places for two adjacent and closely related, but separate, historic properties in Upper Manhattan, New York City:
Pages in category "Burials at Trinity Church Cemetery" The following 77 pages are in this category, out of 77 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum on Riverside Drive at 155th Street, formerly the location of John James Audubon's estate, is where Audubon, Alfred Tennyson Dickens, John Jacob Astor, Clement Clarke Moore, and Ed Koch are buried. It is the only remaining active cemetery in the borough of Manhattan.
New York City Marble Cemetery, [4] East Village, the second oldest non-sectarian cemetery in New York City. Saint Bartholomew's Episcopal Church, Midtown Manhattan; St. John's Burying Ground [5] Second Shearith Israel Cemetery, West Village [6] Third Shearith Israel Cemetery, Chelsea [7] Trinity Church Cemetery, [8] Financial District
Trinity Church Lansingburgh is a historic Episcopal church complex located at 585 Fourth Avenue in Troy, New York.The complex consists of the Gothic Revival style stone church (1869) designed by architect Henry C. Dudley, a Greek Revival style brick rectory (c. 1844), brick parish hall (1930), cemetery (1807) with approximately 240 graves, and a wrought iron fence (1901).
St. Paul's Chapel is a chapel building of Trinity Church, an episcopal parish, located at 209 Broadway, between Fulton Street and Vesey Street, in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Built in 1766, it is the oldest surviving church building in Manhattan [4] and one of the nation's most well renowned examples of Late Georgian church architecture. [5]
A cemetery originally occupied what is now the site of the 1851 church and the Lower School. [1] This informal burying ground was established long before Holy Trinity Church bought its land. [8] In June 1796, an additional 20 feet (6.1 m) of land west of the church was purchased, and by 1798 the church owned all the ground west to 36th Street. [9]