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Altar in the former Priory Church at Hawkesyard

Ground was broken for the Loa Tabernacle (Wayne Stake Tabernacle) in late fall 1906. A team of horses was used because the ground was already frozen at the time. The Corner Stone was laid on November 23, 1906 and the building was compleated and dedicated by October 1909.

This triad of windows shows Jesus knocking, the Ascension, and the Good Shepherd.

 

Redeemer Lutheran Church

 

Kingston, N.Y.

 

Aug. 12, 2011

Liverpool Anglican Cathedral interior

Designed by local architects Lang & Raugland, the Urban Refuge Church (1958) on Chicago Avenue at 55th Street in south Minneapolis features interesting mid-century brickwork and bold geometric shapes.

Village Nikolskoye, Klin Raion, Moscow Oblast, Russia

 

Saint Nikolas Church was built by Alexey Danilovich Tatishchev (1697-1760) over the period 1738-1758. The church was closed and repurposed in 1937. The bell tower was demolished sometime in the 1950s in order to provide construction bricks for the nearby farm. The church was returned to the Russian Orthodox Church in 1995. Restoration began in 1995. Church Services are currently held in a small, heated chapel inside the church.

 

It is interesting to note that village Nikolskoye was the birthplace of the XVII c. Russian church architect Jacob Bukhvostov.

Sixth Church of Christ, Scientist, Houston

2222 Elgin Ave, Third Ward, Houston, Texas, US

 

1941, completed

 

Abandonded church for an African-American Christian Scientist congregation across the street from Emancipation Park. As of summer 2014, shows signs of renovations and repairs underway.

 

www.houstondeco.org/1940s/sixth.html

Classic style A Frame LDS Church in Orem Utah. Located on 400 East at about 1100 North.

Old World Village, Huntington Beach, CA

A segment of the stained glass window on Jesus' Crucifixion shows Mary, Mother of Jesus, and the other women.

 

Redeemer Lutheran Church

 

Kingston, N.Y.

 

Aug. 12, 2011

Commonly known as "the church in the graveyard" - St Stephen's and the graveyard that surrounds it is an oasis in one of the most densely populated areas of Sydney.

 

Camperdown Cemetery was founded in 1848 and consecrated in 1849. It was founded as an Anglican General Cemetery, accepting the dead of all denominations, but burying them with the rites of the Church of England. Previous cemeteries in Sydney were the so-called Old Burial Ground of 1792, in George Street on the site of the Sydney Town Hall, and the New Burial Ground (1819–68) in Devonshire Street on the site of Central Railway Station, Sydney.

 

The cemetery was proposed by a group of Sydney businessmen who formed the Church of England Cemetery Trust and in 1848 purchased 13 acres (53,000 m2) of land "beyond the boundary stone" of Sydney, from Maurice Charles O'Connell, grandson of Governor Bligh. The land was part of a grant made to Governor Bligh and named "Camperdown" by him in commemoration of the Battle of Camperdown in which he had taken part. The land passed to his daughter Mary, who married Bligh's Aide de Camp, Major Putland, and following his death, Sir Maurice O'Connell. The cemetery was consecrated by Bishop William Grant Broughton on 16 January 1849.

 

In 1871, the small Church of St Stephen's Newtown, built by Edmund Blacket in 1844, could no longer contain the congregation. A site was needed for a larger church. By an act of parliament, the Church of England was permitted to build a church within the existent cemetery and Edmund Blacket was again the architect. The resulting St Stephen's Church, which held its first service in 1874, is a masterpiece of Gothic Revival architecture, and contributes greatly to the heritage significance of the site as a whole.

 

St Mary South Dalton is a church worth going many miles to see - and its 208 ft spire ought to be photographed against a brilliant blue sky rather than disappearing into light East Yorkshire February mist! The church was paid for by Lord Hotham, and cost him £25,000 in 1861 (a London church of similar size could be built for £8,000!). It was designed by John Loughbourough Pearson (who also designed Scorborough for Lord Hotham's Land Agent, James Hall - see this stream for photos).This cost was partly due to the high quality of materials, but mainly due to the intricate carving in wood and stone (see subsequent posts for evidence of this). The fittings were equally fine. The 1861 census reveals that there were 32 stonemasons and craftsmen lodging in the village - presumably employees of George Myers of Hull who was the builder - he was Pugin's builder. The church has a nave, chancel and two transepts. In the Hotham Chapel is a fine monument to Sir John Hotham (d1689) with underneath the reclining figure of Sir John a skeleton to remind viewers of the transitory nature of life. The figure is supported by four figures representing the cardinal virtues. One of the glories of the church is the stained glass - and especially the east and west windows by Clayton & Bell, the east window showing the Last Judgement (1861) - one of their masterpieces.

Detail from Altar Cards hand illumined by sisters of the Stone Congregation.

This building replaced the old Coalville

Tabernacle when it was torn down in 1971 amid much controversy. The stained glass windows were salvaged from the old Tabernacle and incorporated into the new building design. The building also houses other artifacts from the old Tabernacle.

St Mary's Church, Swinbrook, Oxfordshire, 22 July 2012. While the main body of the church dates from around the beginning of the thirteenth century, the tower was built in just six weeks in 1822.

Mormon Temple in Manti Utah. Work on the pioneer temple in Manti was begun on April 25, 1877. The temple was completed May 28, 1888 -- eleven years in construction. Using local Oolite Limestone quarried from the hill on which the temple sits. The temple was built with all volunteer labor.

First Church of Christ Scientist located in Midtown Atlanta, Georgia

Pugin's Cathedral (St. Aidan's) in Enniscorthy. Built 1843-48 and designed by A W N Pugin.

The church looked very special in these weather conditions.

Yaroslavl, Russia

 

The church and its free-standing bell tower are featured on the back of the Russian 1000-ruble banknote. www.cbr.ru/eng/bank-notes_coins/bank-notes/print.asp?file...

 

Now part of the Yaroslavl State Museum - Preserve of History, Architecture, and Arts

Sixth Church of Christ, Scientist, Houston

2222 Elgin Ave, Third Ward, Houston, Texas, US

 

1941, completed

 

Abandonded church for an African-American Christian Scientist congregation across the street from Emancipation Park. As of summer 2014, shows signs of renovations and repairs underway.

 

www.houstondeco.org/1940s/sixth.html

The modern United Methodist Church stands on the northwest corner of Main Street and Freeman Avenue in Luverne, Minnesota.

Liverpool Anglican Cathedral

Castleton, Church architecture, Derybshire, St Edmund’s Church

Village Podzhigorodovo, Klin Raion, Moscow Oblast, Russia

 

The church was built in 1778-1783 by two brothers Yurevyh, local noblemen who had a large manor here. It's believed that the architect was the famous Russian architect Vasily Bazhenov. Unusual two-story church with the winter church on the first floor and the summer church on the second floor. The exterior was plastered and whitewashed in 1906.

 

The last owner of the Podzhigorodovo manor was nobleman Vladimir Sokolov. He was a revolutionary and his party nickname was Volsky. Vladimir Lenin visited Sokolov before the 1917 revolution. There's a photo of Lenin playing chess with Sokolov in his Podzhigorodovo manor house.

 

Olga remembers climbing the bell tower as a child. The church was used then to store chemical fertilizer. She still recalls the smell of the fertilizer and the treacherous circular staircase.

 

The church was returned to the Russian Orthodox Church in 1992. Services are presently held in the first floor winter church. The second floor summer church has not been restored. Like many rural churches in Russia, the Church of Archangel Michael is undergoing slow restoration and still dominates the surrounding landscape.

Liverpool Anglican Cathedral

Wall painting at the parish church in Stone.

Image Punch Photoshop action.

Large and original size will be grainy because of PS Action and ISO 1600.

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