St. John's Episcopal Church (Cape Vincent, New York)

Last updated
St. John's Episcopal Church
St Johns Episcopal Church in Cape Vincent NY.jpg
USA New York location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Usa edcp location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Location352 S. Market St., Cape Vincent, New York
Coordinates 44°7′30″N76°20′8″W / 44.12500°N 76.33556°W / 44.12500; -76.33556 Coordinates: 44°7′30″N76°20′8″W / 44.12500°N 76.33556°W / 44.12500; -76.33556
Arealess than one acre
Built1841
Architectural styleFederal
MPS Cape Vincent Town and Village MRA
NRHP reference No. 85002476 [1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 27, 1985

St. John's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church located at Cape Vincent in Jefferson County, New York. It was built in 1841 and consists of a one-story main block and a lower side wing in the Federal style. A three-story entry tower projects from the central bay of the front facade. The tower features an eight sided spire. Also on the property is the parish cemetery with the earliest gravestones dating to 1852. [2]

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. [1]

Related Research Articles

St. Pauls Evangelical Lutheran Church (Liberty, New York) United States historic place

St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church is a historic Evangelical Lutheran church in Liberty, Sullivan County, New York. It was built in 1908 and is a modest Late Gothic Revival style building. It is built of iron spot brick with limestone and terra cotta trim. It features a gable roofed nave with and engaged side entrance tower.

St. Bartholomews Protestant Episcopal Church and Rectory United States historic place

St. Bartholomew's Protestant Episcopal Church and Rectory is a historic Episcopal church and rectory located at 1227 Pacific St., east of Bedford Avenue in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, New York, New York. It was built in 1886 in the Romanesque Revival style. It is constructed of brick with stone trim and topped by a slate roof. It features a squat, battered stone tower crowned by an ogival, tiled roof. The two story brick and stone rectory features twin gables and ogival tower.

Richmond Avenue Methodist-Episcopal Church United States historic place

Richmond Avenue Methodist-Episcopal Church, also known as Richmond Avenue United Methodist Church, is a historic Methodist Episcopal Church located at Buffalo in Erie County, New York. It consists of two structures: a rectilinear Chapel structure, which dates to 1885–1891, and a larger Temple structure dating to 1887–1898. Both structures are two and a half stories set on a raised basement story, with two three-story towers. They are built of ashlar Medina sandstone. It is now home to the Upper West Side Arts Center.

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

St. John's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church located at Phelps in Ontario County, New York. It was built in 1849, the chancel was extended in 1897, and the tower added in 1905. The meeting room and office addition was completed in 1954. It is architecturally significant as a Gothic Revival-style church that reflects the "English parish" movement traceable to the Church of St. James the Less in Philadelphia.

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

St. John's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church located at Honeoye Falls in Monroe County, New York. It is a one-story, stone structure built in 1841–1842, with a bell tower added in 1855. The building features Greek Revival massing and a Doric order portico with Gothic Revival arched windows and doorways.

St. Marks Episcopal Church (Mt. Kisco, New York) United States historic place

St. Mark's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at the junction of N. Bedford Rd. and E. Main Street in Mt. Kisco, Westchester County, New York. It was designed by architect Bertram Goodhue in 1907 and built from 1909 to 1913 in the late Gothic Revival style. The church was expanded in 1927–1928. It is a two-story building constructed of square cut local granite and schist. It has carved limestone trim and copings and a statue of St. Mark by Lee Lawrie. Its intersecting gable roof is covered by green and purple slate shingles. A tower was added in 1919–1920. Connected to the church is a contributing parish hall.

St. Peters Episcopal Church (Port Chester, New York) United States historic place

St. Peter's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at 19 Smith Street in Port Chester, Westchester County, New York. It was built in 1889–1890 and its exterior of bluestone, gray limestone, and brick with a slate roof is in a late Gothic Revival style. It features a large, square clock tower, which also serves as a porte cochere, ten Tiffany grisaille windows, and other Tiffany furniture including the altar rail and brass pulpit. The parish hall was built in the mid to late-1920s and is two and one half stories with a castellated parapet and gable roof. It includes a large auditorium with a raised stage.

St. Johns Episcopal Church and Cemetery (Oakdale, New York) United States historic place

St. Johns Episcopal Church and Cemetery is a historic Episcopal church and cemetery on Montauk Highway on the northeast side, about 300' northwest of the junction with Locust Avenue, Town of Islip in Oakdale, Suffolk County, New York. The church is a small, rectangular one story building with a gable roof, wood shingle siding, and a simple painted wood exterior trim. It features a three-story, square, engaged tower with a shallow pyramidal roof. It was enlarged and remodeled about 1843 and restored in 1962; the stained glass window was added in 1873. The cemetery contains about 100 graves with burials dating from the late 18th century to early 20th century.

Saint Pauls Church (Waterloo, New York) United States historic place

Saint Paul's Church is a historic Episcopal church located at Waterloo in Seneca County, New York. It was constructed in 1863-1864 and is a masonry church built of local limestone in the Gothic Revival style. The 52 feet by 72 feet church features a tower with a stone spire and clock. A large two story rough cut limestone parish house was built in 1916.

St. Peters Episcopal Church Complex (Auburn, New York) United States historic place

The St. Peter's Episcopal Church Complex is a historic Episcopal church complex located at 169 Genesee Street in Auburn. The complex consists of the church, the Parish House, a cemetery, and a small burial plot.

St. James AME Zion Church (Ithaca, New York) United States historic place

St. James AME Zion Church is a historic African Methodist Episcopal Zion church located at Ithaca in Tompkins County, New York. It is a two-story, frame church structure set on a high foundation and featuring a four-story entrance tower. The church structure was begun in the 1830s and modified many times since. The original stone meetinghouse was built in 1836 and is believed to be Ithaca's oldest church and one of the oldest in the AME Zion system.

St. Marys Episcopal Church (Brooklyn) United States historic place

St. Mary's Episcopal Church is an historic Episcopal church at 230 Classon Avenue in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, New York City. It was built in 1858 of Belleville brownstone in the Gothic Revival style.

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.

Zion Episcopal Church and Rectory (Colton, New York) United States historic place

Zion Episcopal Church and Rectory is a historic Episcopal church complex located at Colton in St. Lawrence County, New York. The church was built in 1883 of red Potsdam Sandstone. It is a gable front building, approximately 48 feet (15 m) wide and 80 feet (24 m) deep and features an 85-foot-tall (26 m), 14 12-foot-square (4.4 m) tower. The rectory was built about 1900 and is a two-story, clapboard-sided Italianate building on a sandstone foundation. It is now used as the Colton Town Museum. Also on the property is a cast-iron urn a cast-iron lamppost dating to the 1880s.

St. James Episcopal Church (Fort Edward, New York) United States historic place

St. James Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at 112 Broadway in Fort Edward in Washington County, New York. It was built in 1849 and modified in three stages in 1880, 1896, and 1914–1915. It is a Gothic Revival style ecclesiastical structure and features a side bell tower on the northwest corner of the building.

St. Johns Episcopal Church and Rectory (Monticello, New York) United States historic place

St. John's Episcopal Church and Rectory is a historic Episcopal church at 15 St. John's Street in Monticello, Sullivan County, New York. It was built between 1879 and 1881 and is "L" shaped in plan, consisting of the church and an attached chapel. It is built of quarry-faced, randomly laid coursed stone. The church features a tall, engaged corner three stage entrance tower with a crenellated top.

Trinity Episcopal Church (Ashland, New York) United States historic place

Trinity Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church on NY 23, southwest of the junction with Co. Rd. 19 in Ashland, Greene County, New York. It was built in 1879 and is a one-story, three by three bay, wood frame structure clad with board and batten siding in the Gothic Revival style. It features a three-story entry / bell tower.

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.

St. Marks Episcopal Church (Green Island, New York) United States historic place

St. Mark's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at 69-75 Hudson Avenue in Green Island, Albany County, New York. It was built in 1866–1867 in a Gothic Revival style. It is a rectangular, brick trimmed stone church building with a steeply pitched roof with three steeply pitched dormers, covered in polychrome slate. The front gable features three pointed Gothic windows and a rose window. It also has a stone bell tower. The two story brick rectory was added in 1883–1884.

St. Pauls Episcopal Church (Elkins Park, Pennsylvania) United States historic place

St. Paul's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church at Old York and Ashbourne Roads in Elkins Park, Cheltenham Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. It was originally built in 1861, and is a gray stone church in the Gothic style. The church was conceived by noted financier Jay Cooke (1821–1905), along with John W. Thomas, J.F. Peniston and William C. Houston. Its size was doubled with an expansion in 1870, and a 60-foot-tall tower added. A transept was added in 1883, and the two-story parish hall wing in 1891. Architect Horace Trumbauer (1868–1938) made some refinements to the church during the 1897 to 1924 period. The main sanctuary of the church features 13 stained glass windows from Tiffany studios.

References

  1. 1 2 "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. JoAnn Beck (July 1985). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: St. John's Episcopal Church". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation . Retrieved 2009-12-10.