Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. Andrews Blockhouse: 1813: St. Andrews: One of three that once guarded St. Andrews. However, it never saw battle. St. Cecile Church: 1813: Sainte-Cécile, New Brunswick: Keillor House: 2: 1813: Dorchester, New Brunswick: It is an example of a Palladian-inspired dwelling with its use of two lateral wings beside a main central block. It is ...
A.D. Gough's St John's Church (1858) is one of several Victorian churches in the town of Royal Tunbridge Wells. Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as: KML GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) Wikimedia Commons has media related to Religious buildings in the Borough of Tunbridge Wells. The borough of Tunbridge Wells, one of 13 ...
The church building is dedicated to Edward Gayer Andrews, a bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, who presided over the dedication service on 16 March 1873. [6] The International Mother's Day Shrine was designated a National Historic Landmark October 5, 1992. [ 2 ]
It is now Andrews Ghana Wesley United Methodist Church. It was built in 1893 and is a one-story, asymmetrical orange brick church in the Queen Anne style. It features a massive rose window on the front facade and a three-story, square bell tower. The interior is arranged on the Akron Plan. Attached to the church is a two-story Sunday school wing.
The Saint Andrews African Methodist Episcopal Church is an African Methodist Episcopal Church in Sacramento, California, founded in 1850. It was the first African American church in California [2] and the first AME Church on the West Coast of the United States. [3] It was originally located at 715 Seventh Street, which is marked by a historical ...
Five kilometres northwest of Brandon, Manitoba, the Brandon Indian Institute was established in 1895 by the Department of Indian Affairs. The school closed in 1972. [1] From 1895 to 1925, the Mission Board of the Methodist Church initially managed the school, intended for children from north of Lake Winnipeg.
The origins of St. Andrew's-Wesley United Church begins with the establishment of the Methodist and Presbyterian churches in the Greater Vancouver area. [1]In the present-day city of Vancouver, on 30 July 1863, the Reverend Ebeneezer Robson, a Methodist minister from New Westminster, held the first preaching service of any kind at Stamp's (Hastings) Mill to a group of six men. [2]
A south aisle with a rose window, designed by Raphael Brandon, was added in 1860, [4] and a chancel in red brick, by Bodley & Garner, in 1900–01. [2] The carvings of the screen and choir stalls are by John Harper. [5] The church has 32 windows; eleven with stained glass installed between 1901 and 1948, four of which are by Shrigley & Hunt.