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Holy Sepulchre Cemetery [1] is a Roman Catholic cemetery in Rochester, New York. Its original parcel was purchased in 1871 under Rochester’s first bishop, the Most Reverend Bernard J. McQuaid. The cemetery’s charter was granted by the State of New York in 1872 and a Board of Trustees was formed with Bishop McQuaid serving as its chairman.
C. C. Person's Sons; C.E. Unterberg, Towbin; Cache (retailer) Canadian American Transportation Systems; Cary Safe Company; Clarke Brothers Bank; Clemson Bros., Inc
Adolph J. Rodenbeck, mayor of Rochester, New York State Assemblyman, Court of Claims Judge, and New York Supreme Court Justice; Eliakim Sherrill, politician and brigade commander in Union Army during Civil War [120] Louise Slaughter, U.S. Representative, chairperson of House Rules Committee [121] Ellicott R. Stillman, Wisconsin State ...
Joseph Lloyd Hogan (March 11, 1916 – August 27, 2000) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as the seventh bishop of the Diocese of Rochester in New York from 1969 to 1978.
Joseph Saladino: Republican: 2004 ... [elected to New York City Council on February 20, 2007] N/A---Staten Island: 63. Michael Cusick: ... Rochester: 132. Joseph ...
In 1808, Pope Pius VII erected the Diocese of New York, taking all of New York State from the Diocese of Baltimore. [5] In Auburn, the first mass for non-native Catholics was held in a private residence in 1816. [6] The first church in the future City of Rochester was St. Patrick's, built in 1823. [7]
The window was made by the Tiffany studios of New York. In 1968, the Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church merged with Calvary Presbyterian Church to form Calvary St. Andrews, a Presbyterian parish. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2006. [1] It is located in the South Wedge Historic District.
The Episcopal Diocese of Rochester is the diocese of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America with jurisdiction over eight counties in west central New York.It is bounded on the north by Lake Ontario, on the east by the Episcopal Diocese of Central New York, on the south by the Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania and on the west by the Episcopal Diocese of Western New York.