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The church, in 2011. St Margaret's Church is an Anglican church in Harwood Dale, a village in North Yorkshire, in England. The church was built in 1862, as a replacement for Old St Margaret's Church, Harwood Dale. It is in the Early English Gothic style, and is a small, rectangular, building, with a combined nave and chancel, with a ...
Old St Margaret's Church is a ruined Anglican church in Harwood Dale, a village in North Yorkshire, in England. The church was built in 1634 for Thomas Posthumous Hoby , in memory of his wife. In 1862, it was replaced by the current St Margaret's Church, Harwood Dale , a mile down the valley, and it gradually fell into ruin. [ 1 ]
Prior to 1887, Catholics in the Riverdale section of the Bronx attended either St. John's in Kingsbridge or St. Mary's in Yonkers. The parish was established in 1887 by the Rev. James F. Kiley, with initial services being held in St. Vincent's Free School (now Le Gras Hall on the Campus of Mount Saint Vincent College).
St Margaret's Church, Rochester is now a Chapel of Ease within the parish of St Peter with St Margaret, Rochester. Previously it was the parish church of St Margaret's Without (that is, outside the city walls of Rochester). Thorpe records it as having previously been called St Margaret's in Suthgate. [1]
St. Margaret's is a medieval church built from flint, ashlar and brick. Its architecture consists of a 13th-century west tower, a wide 15th century nave with large windows and a hammerbeam roof, a south porch built in the 15th century, formerly two storeys high and with an 18th-century Dutch gable with a large pediment and dentil cornice, and a chancel which was rebuilt in 1912.
St Margaret's was rebuilt from 1486 to 1523, at the instigation of King Henry VII, and the new church, which largely still stands today, was consecrated on 9 April 1523. It has been called "the last church in London decorated in the Catholic tradition before the Reformation", and on each side of a large rood there stood richly painted statues ...
The church, in 2009. St Margaret's Church is the parish church of Aislaby, a village near Whitby, in North Yorkshire, in England. There was a Mediaeval chapel in Aislaby, which in 1732 was replaced by a church, a plain, rectangular building. [1] This church was replaced in 1896 by a new church, designed by Edward H. Smales. [2]
The church, St. Margaret's, was formally dedicated on 15 April 1880 by Rev. William Henry Elton. [ 1 ] The first district chaplain was Rev. John Kemp, who came to Ceylon from State of Sarawak in Borneo , where he had been a chaplain and a missionary under the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG) for three years.