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Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception (Portland, Maine) Our Lady Queen of Peace Church (Boothbay Harbor, Maine) All Saints Parish Our Lady, Queen of Peace Church, Boothbay Harbor (Lincoln) Saint Ambrose Church, Richmond (Sagadahoc) Saint Charles Borromeo Church, Brunswick; Saint John the Baptist Church, Brunswick; Saint Katharine Drexel Church ...
Sacred Heart Church (Portland, Maine) St. Dominic's Church (Portland, Maine) St. Lawrence Arts Center; St. Paul's Church and Rectory; St. Peter's Catholic Church (Portland, Maine) State Street Congregational Church
In 1928, the pope renamed the Diocese of Portland as the Diocese of Portland in Maine. This action was to avoid confusion with the newly erected Archdiocese of Portland in Portland, Oregon. [19] During his five-year tenure in Portland, Murray established thirty new parishes and a diocesan weekly newspaper, Church World, in 1930.
The Williston-West Church and Parish House are an historic church and house at 32 Thomas Street in the West End neighborhood of Portland, Maine, United States. The church was built in 1897, and is a significant Gothic work by Francis H. Fassett. The parish house, built in 1905, was designed by John Calvin Stevens and John Howard Stevens.
The Abyssinian Meeting House is a historic church building at 73–75 Newbury Street, in the Munjoy Hill neighborhood of Portland, Maine. [1] Built 1828-1831 by free African-Americans, it is Maine's oldest African-American church building, and the third oldest in the nation. [2]
The Green Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church is a historic church at 46 Sheridan Street in Portland, Maine, United States. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story structure of textured concrete block masonry built in 1914 to house the congregation founded in 1891. The church is named after founder Moses Samuel Green, who was the city's wealthiest African American ...
The church congregation was founded in 1674, when Portland was known as Falmouth, then in the Province of Maine, and its early history was interrupted by Native American attacks. Its period of continuous history begins in 1718, when it began meeting in a log church, which was replaced in 1721 and again in 1740 by frame structures.
The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception is a historic cathedral on Cumberland Avenue in Portland, Maine, which serves as seat of the Diocese of Portland. The rector is Father Seamus Griesbach. [2] The church, an imposing Gothic Revival structure built in 1866–69, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. [1]