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Wooden churches in West Virginia (1 C, 8 P) Pages in category "Wooden churches in the United States" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
Pages in category "Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 228 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Virgil Alexander Wood was born in Charlottesville, Virginia on April 6, 1931. [1] In 1948 he interviewed his grandfather Jesse, who had been born into slavery and recalled witnessing the reading of the Emancipation Proclamation by a Union soldier. [2] Wood was ordained as a Baptist minister in his late teens. [3]
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Christ Church, Millwood. In 1816, population growth (and the donation of land by a local family) led to construction of a wooden chapel of ease about ten miles away at the intersection of the road to Alexandria with the road to Greenway Court, the estate of Lord Fairfax, who initially worshipped here or at what became Christ Episcopal Church (Winchester, Virginia).
Diamond Hill Baptist Church is a historic African-American Baptist church located at Lynchburg, Virginia. It was built in 1886, and is a three-story, L-shaped, brick church building in the Late Gothic Revival style. It has brick buttresses capped with limestone, Gothic pointed arched windows, a three-story entrance tower with steeple, and a ...
The Linden Methodist Church was built in 1842 and numerous buildings still exist dating from the 19th century. [2] In November 1954, tragedy struck the Linden church. A fire thought to be caused by a faulty pipe in the wood-burning stove destroyed the beautiful 112-year-old wooden structure.
St. Andrew's Church is an historic Episcopal church complex in Richmond, Virginia, United States. The complex consists of the church (1901), school (1901), parish hall (1904), Instructive Nurse Association Building (1904), and William Byrd Community House or Arents Free Library (1908).