View allAll Photos Tagged Trinity,

Collection: A. D. White Architectural Photographs, Cornell University Library

Accession Number: 15/5/3090.00238

 

Title: Trinity Church, Boston

 

Architect: Henry Hobson Richardson (American, 1838-1886)

  

Building Date: 1872-1877

Photograph date: ca. 1877-ca. 1895

  

Location: North and Central America: United States; Massachusetts, Boston

 

Materials: albumen print

 

Style: Romanesque Revival

 

Provenance: Gift of Andrew Dickson White

 

Persistent URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1813.001/5sdn

 

There are no known U.S. copyright restrictions on this image. The digital file is owned by the Cornell University Library which is making it freely available with the request that, when possible, the Library be credited as its source.

   

We had some help with the geocoding from Web Services by Yahoo!

  

Trinity Episcopal Church

Built 1870

 

Newtown, Connecticut

The Great Gate, which forms the entrance to Trinity College, was mostly completed in the 1530s as part of the King's Hall, which received its charter in 1337 and which was incorporated into Trinity College when the latter was founded by King Henry VIII in 1546. Trinity College Chapel was completed in 1567.

Trinity Arms pub in Brixton, London. The Trinity was built in 1850, it is named after the Trinity Asylum in Acre Lane which was founded for poor women who professed belief in the Holy Trinity by Thomas Bailey. It is a landmark that has survived the bombings of World War II, an icon which is a favorite among local businesses, couples and gig goers alike.

 

Trinity Arms

45 Trinity Gardens

London

SW9 8DR

The University of Trinity College, referred to locally as Trinity College, Toronto or Trin, is the smallest federated college of the University of Toronto, with 1820 undergraduate students. Trinity also houses an Anglican divinity school with 138 students, and is a constituent member of the Toronto School of Theology.[5]

Trinity maintains very high academic standards for undergraduates. Between 2005 and 2009, Ontario students entering Trinity had an academic average of 92 per cent,[6] and of the seven colleges at the University of Toronto, Trinity has the highest proportion of students who graduate with "Distinction" or with "High Distinction".[7] Moreover, the majority of Trinity alumni go on to pursue professional or graduate degrees,[7] and the college has produced 35 Rhodes Scholars since its inception.[8] The college maintains Oxbridge-style traditions which reflect its English roots, including the mandatory wearing of gowns at dinner, a chapel choir comprised partially of paid choral scholars,[9] and the wearing of college scarves and jackets. The Anglican seminary is active in college life, with worship services held twelve times weekly in the chapel,[10] but the student body is nonetheless diverse, with nearly 25% of undergraduates coming from 60 countries outside Canada.

Die Dreifaltigkeitskirche gehoert zu den architektonischen Meisterwerken Amerikas.

Epiphany House on the same site

Helios 44-2 | Kodak Gold 400

2 week Educational Program at Cape Eleuthera Institute and The Island School. Cape Eleuthera, The Bahamas.

Trinity is a small town located on Trinity Bay in Newfoundland and Labrador. The town contains a number of buildings recognized as Registered Heritage Structures by the province.

150th Anniversary Event 1866-2016 - Held at Islandbridge on Saturday 16th April 2016

Allington, Lincolnshire - Holy Trinity Church. Dating from the C12th, with C13th; C15th; C16th and late C18th additions and alterations. Grade 2* listed. The church is in unusual in the lack of vehicle or permanent path access, there being just a grassy entrance from the road, and another private gate to Allington Hall.

 

Allington, Nr Grantham, Lincolnshire - Parish Church of the Holy Trinity, Manor Lane

September 2019

Trinity Square Garden at night

Trinity Blood Cosplay at AnimeNEXT 2006

Trinity - Voodoo Lights: Shoot at the dancefloor during a Session of the Voodoo Hop DJ Collective at the Ressonar Festival in Chapada Diamantina / Brazil. Imagine their pumping beats in the background. No Photoshop, just long exposure and lights. Camera: OLYMPUS OM-D EM10 Lights: LED LENSER and others #500px #pin #tw, ift.tt/1QcbQnC, www.1000lights.de

Mamiya six w/ Zuiko | Tri-x | XTOL

St. Pauls Anglican Church in Trinity, Newfoundland

Eros & Amore

Trinity Smith Privat Show

2 week Educational Program at Cape Eleuthera Institute and The Island School. Cape Eleuthera, The Bahamas.

150th Anniversary Event 1866-2016 - Held at Islandbridge on Saturday 16th April 2016

Trinity Anglican Church in Havelock, Qc

1857

Trinity Court, Gray's Inn Road, London

 

More information about my Urban, Rural and Coastal Wanderings can be found on my "In Search of Space" blog at www.dakotaboo-in-search-of-space.blogspot.com/

The small Trinity Chapel stands in a corner of the Troitskaya Square in St Petersburg.

Trinity in a vintage drawer

 

Freie Interpretation der Dreifaltigkeit in einer alten Lade

Collection: A. D. White Architectural Photographs, Cornell University Library

Accession Number: 15/5/3090.00239

 

Title: Trinity Church, Boston

 

Architect: Henry Hobson Richardson (American, 1838-1886)

  

Building Date: 1872-1877

Photograph date: ca. 1877-ca. 1895

  

Location: North and Central America: United States; Massachusetts, Boston

 

Materials: albumen print

 

Style: Romanesque Revival

 

Provenance: Gift of Andrew Dickson White

 

Persistent URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1813.001/5sdp

 

There are no known U.S. copyright restrictions on this image. The digital file is owned by the Cornell University Library which is making it freely available with the request that, when possible, the Library be credited as its source.

   

We had some help with the geocoding from Web Services by Yahoo!

  

The Tower of Holy Trinity Church (Deconsecrated) can be seen over the wall of the ancient Shaftesbury Abbey grounds and park. The roofline of the old Georgian rectory can also be seen

Dollmore Trinity Jude. Photo by Dollmore.

The new one, not the old one.

I recently had the opportunity to test out the new Phottix LED panels.

For the most part, I use strobes in my work with the occasional LED panel for ambient fill. I also use a lot of colors and gels in my work. So the idea of a little LED panel that has a variety of colors that can be changed very rapidly is intriguing.

On the day that I received the panels, I had a shoot scheduled, so it was the perfect opportunity to put the LEDs to the test. They arrived fully charged and ready to go, which made me happy. The instructions and operations were very straightforward and easy to figure out. I love the idea that you have two mounting sockets so you can mount the panel vertically or horizontally. The back panel readout tells you how much power is left, as well as what mode you are shooting in. After shooting for an hour and a half, the LED indicated that I had about 40 minutes of battery life left.

After just one shoot, I became very versed in using them. I definitely will be keeping the Phottix LED panels in my bag for future shoots.

 

www.phottix.com/m200rintroduction?fbclid=IwAR3PAwZ4Ha1n2S...

Trinity Bantams in action against the Amherst Mammoths Saturday Nov. 2, 2019 in Amherst, MA. (Damian Strohmeyer for Amherst Football Parents)

Trinity takes place from August 16 to August 27 (Gallery artsagan at SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA)

Opening show : August 18(Saturday) 6. P.M

Leeds Trinity. Musicians from Opera North entertaining the shoppers in the Trinity Leeds Mall. The 'Piano Cube' behind is an installation of four upright pianos positioned as a cube, and part of the Leeds Piano Trail 2021.

 

City of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England - Leeds Trinity Shopping Mall, Boar Lane / Briggate

September 2021

Trinity Market and Queen Victoria Square 14 May 2018 in Monochrome

Trinity Irish Dancers perform Saturday afternoon at Beaver Dam High School during an event sponsored in part by Infinty Healthcare and Beaver Dam Community Hospitals Foundation. Citizen Staff/Megan Sheridan

Gilbert & George like: Trinity

Holy Trinity was built in 1819 at a time when Huddersfield was growing rapidly due to the Industrial Revolution. The early nineteenth century was also a time of revival in the church and attendance was rising. In Huddersfield, the Parish Church (St Peters) was full and Holy Trinity was built as a Chapel of Ease, to serve the growing population.

 

Holy Trinity was built by Benjamin Haigh Allen, who lived at nearby Greenhead Hall (on the site of the college).

Allen was born in 1792 and was a County Magistrate and the first chairman of the Huddersfield Banking Company (now part of HSBC). He was a man of great faith, strongly affected by the evangelical revival. Although very wealthy, he tried to use his money philanthropically to provide for the poor.

 

Allen was empowered by parliament to have the church built. It cost him the personal sum of £12,000 and its construction took 3 years. The church was designed by Thomas Taylor of Leeds and built by Joseph Kaye, a local builder responsible for many of the town’s principle buildings including the railway station and the Methodist’s Queen Street Chapel (now the Lawrence Batley Theatre).

Holy Trinity’s design was modelled on Christ Church, Liversedge which sits on a similar site and was also by Thomas Taylor.

 

Holy Trinity was consecrated on October 8th 1819. Henry Maddock, a close friend of Allen’s became the church’s first minister. Allen worked tirelessly for the church, teaching in its school. He was passionate about spreading the gospel message.

The 1820s were a stressful time for the businesses of the town. There was unrest amongst the working population, who struggled to adapt to changing working practices and machinery. There was a banking crisis in 1825 and some local banks failed, hitting trade and manufacturing output. The Huddersfield Bank was incorporated in 1827, becoming only the second bank in England to become a joint stock bank, Allen became its first Chairman.

 

It was a great shock when Allen died in 1829 aged just 36. He was buried in the crypt alongside his infant daughter; his memorial is in the chancel opposite the organ. He left a widow and four children. His funeral service, held at Trinity Church was preceded by a procession of 700 gentlemen in deep mourning from the Parish Church. All the shops shut as a sign of respect and the Leeds Mercury newspaper reported a crowd of over 10,000 standing silently lining the streets to the church.

 

Holy Trinity was built to accommodate 1500 people in tall box-pews. Galleries were built around three sides around the central triple-decker pulpit constructed in front of the chancel to give a commanding view. Preaching the word of God was clearly part of the founding principles of Holy Trinity. To lead the worship of the congregation a large singing loft, containing an organ and seating for 100, was situated above the west gallery. 500 of the seats in the church were to be freely available for the use of the poor of the parish. Holy Trinity was built with a churchyard and deep crypt for burials and Allen was permitted to sell a fifth of the burial plots for interments.

 

Services at Holy Trinity included the singing of hymns, unusual for many Anglican churches of the time, alongside the singing of the Psalms and canticles. Preaching and teaching was paramount, as both Allen and Maddock had been strongly influenced by the ‘Clapham Sect’. a group of evangelical social reformers.

 

With Huddersfield’s growing population and the churchyard at St Peters being full, Holy Trinity saw a large proportion of Huddersfield’s burials, mainly in unmarked plots. There were also some burials in the crypt which was built as a catacomb, but it seemed this became unpopular or unfashionable. The result was that the churchyard was closed in 1852 with the opening of the nearby Edgerton Cemetery.

In 1845 the singing loft was removed and a new organ situated in the west gallery. A smaller pulpit replaced the original.

 

A boys choir with 20 choristers was started, which sat in the west gallery. The chancel was used for the occasional services of Holy Communion and for lectures, lessons and classes. It was raised just one step above the nave and partially hidden behind the original pulpit. The pulpit was moved to the left when the choir moved into the chancel in 1878.

 

Holy Trinity became a parish church in 1857 serving the growing districts of Edgerton, Springwood, Gledholt and Marsh.

 

he church interior was remodelled during the 1880s. There had been calls for the removal of the north and south galleries to make the church brighter inside. In line with many other churches, the organ was moved into the north vestry. To prepare for the organ’s installation part of the north gallery was demolished, but this was done without a ‘faculty’ (official permission) and the churchwardens ended up in the Consistory Court. Eventually the decision was made that the galleries should remain, to preserve the original number of ‘free sittings’ for the poor, but the removed section of gallery needn’t be replaced.

 

This is the reason the stained glass windows on the north and south aisles only rise to the level of the galleries, but the window next to the organ is full height.

 

In the redevelopment, the chancel was raised by 19″, a new vicar’s stall and pulpit constructed and steeper galleries built. New pews in pitch-pine with brass umbrella stands replaced the tall box pews. Stained glass was first used in the church. The east window was given in memory of Sarah Allen, the founder’s sister in law who lived at West Place, Trinity Street. It is a particularly fine depiction of the Ascension and the teaching of Christ in Matthew 25:35-6, to feed the hungry, welcome the stranger, visit prisoners and the sick. The eagle lectern was given by the pupils of the schools. The church was first lit by gas, an improved heating system was installed and encaustic tiles were laid in the central aisle and chancel.

The organ was built by Jardine of Manchester at a cost of £620. Some stops were retained from the previous organ on the west gallery, the rest of which was sold to St Matthew’s Burnley. The organ has been extended by Wadsworth in 1924, Henry Willis in 1963 and Wood of Huddersfield in 1974. The organ contains 2,348 pipes and over 3 miles of cables. It is considered one of the best instruments in the town and whilst not used extensively for services, is often used in concerts hosted in the church.

 

The churchyard was extended up to Wentworth Street and the lych-gate built in 1888. At the same time the clock was first installed in the tower and a second bell was given so that it could strike the hours. It was hoped that the clock-face could be gas-lit to shine out across the newly opened Greenhead Park, but the Huddersfield Corporation refused to make a contribution to its cost and so these plans were dropped. Holy Trinity was built with just one bell, cast in 1722 by Edward Sellar. Where this second-hand bell came from is unknown. The (larger) clock-bell, cast in 1884 by Gillett’s of Croydon was found to be too heavy for the tower and was removed and sold to St Buryan’s Church, near Lands End, Cornwall in 1994.

 

Services in Marsh were moved to the temporary Parish Room, built behind the school on what was then called ‘Mission Street’, now St James’s Road, in 1892. These later moved to the adjacent Parish Hall built in 1913. The hall became an important centre for local, community activities. It was hoped the site of the Parish Room could be used for the construction of a new church in the 1920s but these ideas proved too expensive at a time of financial hardship. The site of the Parish Room was used for the school children to play on before being developed as a tennis club before being sold for housing.

 

he Parish Hall was built to accommodate the growing activities of the church. The hall itself seated 350, (not including its gallery) and 10 classrooms opened off it for use by the Sunday School. There were changing rooms for sports teams, a billiards room, kitchens and meeting rooms spread over 4 floors. The hall was designed to be multi-purpose and was licensed for public worship as St James’. Soon after its opening, the building was requisitioned for use as a War Hospital during the First World War. The hall was used extensively by church and community until being sold in 2002.

 

The church building was completely reordered in 1995 to provide greater flexibility. A platform replaced the Vicar’s stall and pulpit, chairs replaced the pews and the galleries removed. A new balcony was built over an enlarged ‘welcome area’, with meeting rooms constructed at first and second floor levels. Whilst the building has seen major change on the inside, outside it remains much as it did when first built, nearly 200 years ago.

 

The changes to the church building reflect the changes to our church life as we continue to interpret the gospel message and serve the people of Huddersfield in the legacy of Benjamin Haigh Allen.

 

The church family at Holy Trinity now seeks to preserve the heritage of its handsome, grade 2* listed building, by making it watertight and warm, fit to serve the people of this town for many more years to come.

 

www.holytrinityhuddersfield.com/who-we-are/history/

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