Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Bethesda Meeting House property includes the 1850 meeting house itself, the mid-late 19th-century parsonage to the south, and the associated cemetery.The church is a large, wood-frame structure built in the Greek Revival "temple" form, albeit with Gothic-style windows.
The Washington D.C. Temple (originally known as the Washington Temple, until 1999), is the 16th operating temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.Located in Kensington, Maryland, just north of Washington, D.C., and near the Capital Beltway, it was the church's first temple built east of the Mississippi River since the original Nauvoo Temple was completed in 1846.
Soon she opened a Sunday school, and later began the Bethesda Missionary Temple. Beall said that in 1939, God revealed plans to her to "built an armory" where "soldiers" could be prepared to do battle for Christianity. As a result, her church, which had contained 350 seats, was expanded to hold 3,000 instead.
The LDS Washington D.C. Temple. Kensington is located in Montgomery County, northwest of Silver Spring, northeast of Bethesda, west of Wheaton and southeast of Rockville.Its latitude is 39°1′48″N, longitude 77°4′30″W.
After the death of Joseph Smith in 1844, ownership of the temple shifted, eventually resulting in the Kirtland Temple Suit court case 1880. While the court case was dismissed, the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (RLDS Church, now Community of Christ) secured ownership of the temple through adverse possession by at least ...
Official website www .facebook .com /Mormons-in-DC-983679751649202 / The Washington DC Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the regional center for the congregations in the Washington, D.C. area and surrounding towns and cities.
However, as early as the fifth century, there was a Byzantine church in what became the precincts of the Church of St. Anne, called the Church of the Probatike [15] (the Church at the Probatic Pool, or the Pool of the Sheep) or the Church of the Lame Man. [16] This site, as subsequently excavated by archaeologists, seems plausibly to fit the ...
The church was originally housed at the Chevy Chase Women's Club in Chevy Chase, Maryland, [2] but was moved in 1955 after the church purchased new land in Bethesda, Maryland. Noted architect, Pietro Belluschi, was hired to design the church building for the site, which was dedicated in May, 1958. The building has been expanded over the years ...