Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Asbury is an unincorporated community located on Sand Mountain in eastern Marshall County, Alabama, United States. It is located about nine miles east of the county seat of Guntersville . The community was named after a Methodist church, which was named for one of the first Methodist Episcopal Church bishops, Francis Asbury .
Saint Joseph's Roman Catholic Church (Mobile, Alabama) St. Luke AME Zion Church; St. Luke's Episcopal Church (Cahaba, Alabama) St. Mark's Lutheran Church (Elberta, Alabama) St. Mary of the Visitation Catholic Church (Huntsville, Alabama) Saint Matthew's Catholic Church (Mobile, Alabama) St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church (Anniston ...
St. Mary of the Visitation Catholic Church (Huntsville, Alabama) This page was last edited on 10 October 2023, at 11:48 (UTC). Text ...
The Asbury Park Planning Board approved a plan that would demolish Holy Spirit Church for houses, but the developer hopes a compromise is possible.
Asbury United Methodist Church (Raleigh, North Carolina), Raleigh, North Carolina, probably the most well-known Asbury United Methodist Church. Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Asbury United Methodist Church .
The church later reorganized as Asbury Temple United Methodist Church. [3] [4] It was built by the architect Charles W. Carlton. [1] In 1957, the church's pastor Douglas E. Moore, organized the Royal Ice Cream sit-in to protest racial segregation in Durham. [5] In the 1970s, Gregory V. Palmer served as pastor at the church.
The Randolph Street Church of Christ is a historic church in Huntsville, Alabama. It was built in 1887 in a Gothic Revival style similar to rural churches, but built of brick. Rather than a central entrance, the tower contains doors under pointed toplights on the sides, and a double lancet window joined under a pointed arch. Another set of ...
Saint Bartley Primitive Baptist Church is a historic Baptist church in Huntsville, Alabama. Bartley Harris (1800 - 1896) served as its minister. He is renowned for refusing to disclose the whereabouts of valuables he hid for his Confederate neighbors and for his mass baptisms in "Big Spring".