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St. Luke AME Church is a historic African Methodist Episcopal church at 2803 21st Avenue North in Birmingham, Alabama. It was designed by the pioneering African American Architect Wallace Rayfield. It was built in 1926 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. [1] [2] The church was significant in the civil rights movement. [2]
The Order of St Luke was founded in 1946 in the former Methodist Church and, until 2012, held the status of Affiliate Organization with the Section on Worship of the General Board of Discipleship of the United Methodist Church. The Order was formed under the leadership of the Rev. R. P. Marshall, a former editor of the Christian Advocate. It ...
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (Birmingham, Alabama) St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (Prairieville, Alabama) St. John's Episcopal Church (Montgomery, Alabama) St. John's-In-The-Prairie; St. Luke's Episcopal Church (Cahaba, Alabama) St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church (Anniston, Alabama) Saint Paul's Episcopal Chapel (Mobile, Alabama) St ...
Constructed in 1837, St. Luke’s Church is considered by many authorities to be one of the finest examples of Greek Revival architecture in the U.S.
St. Luke AME Zion Church is a historic African Methodist Episcopal Zion (AMEZ) church at 3937 12th Ave. North in Birmingham, Alabama.The congregation was established in 1888 and the current building was constructed in 1930.
In 1993 he returned to Alabama and became bishop-in-residence at St. Luke's Church in Mountain Brook, Alabama, a Birmingham suburb. He died in Birmingham on February 2, 2004. He died in Birmingham on February 2, 2004.
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (Birmingham, Alabama) St. Luke AME Zion Church; Sardis Baptist Church (Birmingham, Alabama) Second Presbyterian Church (Birmingham, Alabama) Shady Grove Baptist Church; St. Luke AME Church
St. Luke's was built in 1854, during Cahaba's antebellum boom years, on Vine Street near the intersection of Vine and 1st South Street. Following the post-war decline of Cahaba, the church was dismantled in 1878 and moved 11 miles (18 km) to the village of Martin's Station, where it was reassembled and continued to serve an Episcopal congregation for several decades. [3]