Grace Episcopal Church | |
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Location | Fourth St. and Kansas Ave., SE., Huron, South Dakota |
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Coordinates | 44°21′43″N98°12′46″W / 44.361819°N 98.212853°W |
Built | 1887 |
Architectural style | Late Gothic Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 89000828 [1] |
Added to NRHP | July 19, 1989 |
The current Grace Episcopal Church in Huron, South Dakota was built in 1963. It is located at 16th and McClellan in Huron, South Dakota.
The previous stone church building at 4th and Kansas Street SE was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 19, 1989. [1] It was deemed significant "a good example of the English Gothic Revival style as commonly used by Episcopalians in the state. It is the oldest extant church building in Huron, South Dakota." [2]
Grace Episcopal Church, or variants thereof, may refer to the following:
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Grace Episcopal Church is an historic Episcopal church building located at 405 2nd Avenue, North East, in Jamestown, Stutsman County, North Dakota. Designed in the Late Gothic Revival style of architecture by British-born Fargo architect George Hancock, it was built 1884 of local fieldstone exterior walls and a wooden roof. Early parish records contain several assertions that George Hancock modeled the church after Christ Episcopal Church which had been opened in 1881, but if he did, it was only in a very general, not specific way. Hancock's later work St. Stephen's Episcopal Church is much more closely related to Christ Church, Medway. On December 3, 1992, Grace Episcopal Church was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Grace Episcopal Church is an historic Episcopal church building located at 152 Ramsey Street, West in Pembina, Pembina County, North Dakota. Designed in the Late Gothic Revival style of architecture by Fargo architect George Hancock, it was built in 1886. Unlike all the other churches in the Episcopal Churches of North Dakota Multiple Property Submission (MPS), it was built of brick instead of local fieldstone. The brick is yellow and was made locally by the Pembina Brick Company. The church building is one of only three extant building built of this brick. In 1937 Grace Church closed due to declining attendance and the building was sold by the Episcopal Diocese of North Dakota to the local Methodist congregation. Today it is the Pembina Pioneer Memorial United Methodist Church. On September 2, 1994, the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places as Grace Episcopal Church.
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George Issenhuth (1862–1941) was an American architect based in South Dakota. He designed several buildings which have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP).