Grace Episcopal Church (Waverly, New York)

Last updated
Grace Episcopal Church
USA New York location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Usa edcp location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Location445 Park Ave., Waverly, New York
Coordinates 42°0′13″N76°32′22″W / 42.00361°N 76.53944°W / 42.00361; -76.53944 Coordinates: 42°0′13″N76°32′22″W / 42.00361°N 76.53944°W / 42.00361; -76.53944
Arealess than one acre
Built1854
ArchitectWashburne, Mr.
Architectural styleGothic Revival
MPS Historic Churches of the Episcopal Diocese of Central New York MPS
NRHP reference No. 00000878 [1]
Added to NRHPAugust 2, 2000

Grace Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church located at Waverly in Tioga County, New York. It is a Gothic Revival style wood-frame structure, three bays wide and six bays deep, and resting on a brick foundation with cement veneer. The building was built in 1854 and features a steeply pitched gable roof, an arched double door entry, and lancet windows. A wooden belfry is perched on the peak of the gable. [2]

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000. [1]

Related Research Articles

Grace-Hampden Methodist Episcopal Church United States historic place

Grace-Hampden Methodist Episcopal Church is a historic Methodist Episcopal church located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a large stone building constructed in 1899. The Romanesque Revival-style church features multiple gables and a square bell tower and masonry construction utilizing local granite with round-arched openings and decorative sill and lintel courses. It was the first ecclesiastical commission of local architect George Clifton Haskell.

Grace Church Complex (Massapequa, New York) United States historic place

The Grace Church Complex, saw its 175th anniversary in 2019, is a historic Episcopal church complex in Massapequa, Nassau County, New York. The complex consists of the church, surrounding parish cemetery, the Floyd-Jones family cemetery, and the DeLancey Floyd-Jones Free Library. The small church was built in 1844 and remodeled in 1905. It is a frame structure on a brick foundation and consists of a vestibule, nave, and chancel. It is in the Gothic Revival style and features a square bell tower with modest spire. The church also has Tiffany glass windows added during the remodeling. Sometime after 1983, the old Grace Church was given to the Historical Society of the Massapequas.

St. Johns Protestant Episcopal Church (Yonkers, New York) United States historic place

St. John's Protestant Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at One Hudson Street in the Getty Square neighborhood of Yonkers, Westchester County, New York. The complex includes the church, chapel, rectory, parish house, and school. The church was originally constructed in 1752, with an addition in 1849, and modifications to the front facade in 1874 by architect Edward Tuckerman Potter (1831–1904). It is constructed of rough gray fieldstone with red brick on the corners. It is cruciform in plan, three bays wide, with a slate-covered gable roof. The front facade features a rose window and four battered buttresses. The parish house and chapel were constructed in 1890–1891 and are connected to the church. The 2+12-story, five-bay-wide rectory was also constructed in 1890–1891 and is connected to the chapel. The additions made during 1890–1891 were by architect Robert Henderson Robertson (1849–1919). A group of women from the church founded St. John's Riverside Hospital in 1869 to care for the poor of the parish.

Caroline Church and Cemetery United States historic place

Caroline Church and Cemetery is a historic Episcopal church and cemetery and also a national historic district at the junction of Dyke and Bates Roads in Setauket, Suffolk County, New York. The church was built in 1729 and is a three-by-four-bay, heavy timber-framed, 42 by 30 foot building sheathed in wood shingles and covered by a gable roof. It features a 42-foot tower surmounted by a 25-foot spire. The complex also includes the parish house, built in 1905, and a barn built in 1893. The cemetery was established in 1734.

Union Meeting House (Cape Vincent, New York) United States historic place

Union Meeting House, also known as the Millens Bay Union Church, is a historic church located at Millens Bay in the Town of Cape Vincent in Jefferson County, New York. It was built between 1869 to 1871 as a cooperative Episcopal and Methodist union church, as a mission of St. John's Episcopal Church in the village of Cape Vincent and of the Methodist-Episcopal Church in St. Lawrence. It is a one-story wood frame structure, rectangular in plan, one bay wide and four bays long. It features a steeply pitched gable roof and steeple with a six sided spire. It can seat about 200 individuals. Interdemoninational services are held on Sunday mornings in July and August each summer.

Methodist Episcopal Church of West Martinsburg United States historic place

Methodist Episcopal Church of West Martinsburg, also known as West Martinsburg Methodist Church, is a historic Methodist Episcopal church located at West Martinsburg in Lewis County, New York. It dates to about 1840 and is of frame construction with clapboard siding. It is rectangular in plan with a simple gable roof. It features a two-stage bell tower surmounted by a steeple.

Bethel AME Church and Manse United States historic place

Bethel AME Church and Manse is a historic African Methodist Episcopal church and manse at 291 Park Avenue in Huntington, Suffolk County, New York. The church was built about 1845 and is a 1+12-story, wood-frame structure that is rectangular in plan with a gable roof and clapboard exterior. The manse was built in 1915 and is a 2-story, wood-frame structure, with a two-by-two-bay square plan.

Cochecton Center Methodist Episcopal Church United States historic place

Cochecton Center Methodist Episcopal Church, also known as Cochecton Center Community Center, is a historic Methodist Episcopal church on Skipperene Road in Cochecton Center, Sullivan County, New York. It was built in 1892 and is a small, rectangular, wood-frame building with clapboard siding on an ashlar foundation and a steep gable roof. It features a three-stage, corner entrance tower surmounted by a tall spire. Also on the property is a former stable, dated to 1912, that was converted for use as a church hall in 1925.

Crescent Methodist Episcopal Church United States historic place

Crescent Methodist Episcopal Church is a historic Methodist Episcopal church located in Crescent, Saratoga County, New York. It was built in 1852 and is a rectangular, three-by-five-bay, brick church in a vernacular Greek Revival style. It is topped by a shallow-pitched, slate-covered, gable roof. It features a two-stage, flat-roofed, open belfry with Tuscan order columns. Attached is a 1-story parish hall wing.

First Methodist Episcopal Church of Nyack United States historic place

First Methodist Episcopal Church of Nyack, also known as Old Stone Church, is a historic Methodist Episcopal church on North Broadway, south of the junction of North Broadway and Birchwood Avenue in Upper Nyack, Rockland County, New York. It was built in 1812-1813 and is a one-story, three by two bay, sandstone building on a stone foundation. It features a moderately pitched gable roof.

West Burlington Memorial Church United States historic place

West Burlington Memorial Church, also known as Christ Church, is a historic Episcopal church on NY 80 in West Burlington, Otsego County, New York. It was built in 1868 in the Gothic Revival style. It is a one-story rectangular building, three bays wide and four bays deep. The building is of wood frame construction with board-and-batten siding. It sits on a fieldstone foundation with a steep gable roof and broad overhanging eaves. The roof is surmounted by a wooden bell cote.

Calvary Episcopal Church (Utica, New York) United States historic place

Calvary Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church building at 1101 Howard Avenue in Utica, Oneida County, New York. It was built in 1870-1872 and is an asymmetrically massed, cruciform plan structure with a rectangular nave and intersecting apse, with a substantial engaged corner tower.

Trinity Episcopal Church-Fairfield United States historic place

Trinity Episcopal Church—Fairfield is a historic Episcopal church located on NY 29 in the hamlet of Fairfield, Herkimer County, New York. It was built in 1808, and is a 2 1/2-story, three bay by four bay, wood frame church with a gable roof. It features a projecting three-story, flat topped square bell tower, centered on the front facade. The church houses an 1845 George Jardine pipe organ that can still be hand pumped. The bell from the Fairfield Academy was installed in the bell tower in 1962. It is considered the mother church to subsequent Episcopal congregations in Herkimer County.

Jewett Presbyterian Church Complex United States historic place

Jewett Presbyterian Church Complex is a historic Presbyterian church on Church Street in Jewett, Greene County, New York. The complex consists of the 1848 Jewett Presbyterian Church and adjacent 1848 former Methodist Episcopal Church. The Jewett Presbyterian Church is a two-story, four by three bay timber-framed building sheathed in clapboard and topped by a gable roof. The former Methodist Episcopal Church was built using a one-story, four by three bay plan and features a moderately pitched gable roof. Both structures feature Greek Revival design elements.

St. Pauls Lutheran Church (Oak Hill, New York) United States historic place

St. Paul's Lutheran Church, originally St. Paul's Episcopal Church, is a historic Lutheran church at 464 Main Street in Oak Hill, Greene County, New York. The original section was built in 1843 and is a heavy timber frame rectangular structure, three bays wide by four bays deep, in a conventional meeting house style. In 1883, a light frame chancel addition was completed and it features a steeply pitched gable roof.

St. Johns Episcopal Church (Johnstown, New York) United States historic place

St. John's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at 1 North Market Street in Johnstown, Fulton County, New York. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.

Larom-Welles Cottage United States historic place

Larom-Welles Cottage is a historic cure cottage located at Saranac Lake in the town of North Elba, Essex and Franklin County, New York. It was built about 1905 and is a three-story wood-frame structure in the Shingle Style on a stone foundation and surmounted by a metal jerkin head gable roof. It has a two-story wing with a shed roof dormer. It has a two bay verandah and entrance porch with a second story sleeping porch. Also on the second floor is a cure porch. It was originally built for the priest of St. Lukes Episcopal Church, later the home of Dr. Edward Welles, a pioneer in thoracic surgery, who practiced at the Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium. The house has been converted to six units.

Grace Episcopal Church (Lexington, North Carolina) United States historic place

Grace Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church located at 419 S. Main Street in Lexington, Davidson County, North Carolina. It was built in 1902, and is a one-story, Late Gothic Revival style red brick building. It features a steeply pitched gable roof, lancet-arched doors and windows, buttresses, a front corner bell tower, and a three-part stained-glass window produced by Tiffany Studios in 1918.

Grace Episcopal Church (Weldon, North Carolina) United States historic place

Grace Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church located at 404 Washington Avenue in Weldon, Halifax County, North Carolina. It was built between 1872 and 1889, and is a rectangular Gothic Revival style stuccoed brick building. It has a steep gable roof, three-stage bell tower, two-stage buttress with capped pinnacle, and lancet windows.

First Methodist Episcopal Church of Rome United States historic place

First Methodist Episcopal Church of Rome is a historic Methodist Episcopal church building located at Rome in Oneida County, New York. It includes the original brick and stone church building, completed in 1868, and the Ninde Memorial Chapel, added in 1910–1911. The church is a 2-story, three-bay-wide building with a spire and bell tower. It has a slate-covered gable roof. The chapel is a 2+12-story, four-bay-wide, red brick building on a cut stone foundation.

References

  1. 1 2 "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. Stacia L. Partin (February 2000). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Grace Episcopal Church". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation . Retrieved 2009-11-10.See also: "Accompanying six photos".