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St. Paul's Catholic Church is a historic Roman Catholic church located in Portsmouth, Virginia, United States. It is a compact Gothic Revival style, cruciform plan church. It is constructed of load-bearing masonry walls clad in quarry-faced granite. The church was designed by John Peebles (1876-1934) in 1897, and dedicated in 1905.
The first Catholic church in Norfolk was St. Patrick's in 1791. Its parishioners were refugees who had fled France after the French Revolution in 1789. It is the oldest parish in the diocese. [7] Around 1796, Reverend James Bushe started building new church in Norfolk. He was succeeded there by the future Archbishop Leonard Neale.
Roman Catholic: Christ Church: 1732–35 1961 Lancaster County, VA: Georgian: Episcopal: St. John's Episcopal Church: 1741 1961 Richmond, VA: Episcopal: Augustus Lutheran Church: 1743–45 1967 Trappe, Pennsylvania: Lutheran: Alamo Mission in San Antonio: 1744–57 1960 San Antonio, TX: Spanish Colonial: Roman Catholic: Los Santos Ángeles de ...
Basilica of St. Andrew (Roanoke, Virginia) Saint Bede Catholic Church (Williamsburg, Virginia) St. Paul's Catholic Church (Portsmouth, Virginia) St. Stephen, Martyr Roman Catholic Church; St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church (Newport News, Virginia)
St. Peter's Pro-Cathedral is a Catholic church located in Richmond, Virginia, United States.It is the oldest Catholic church in the city. From the erecting of the Diocese of Richmond in 1850 until the completion of the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in 1906, St. Peter's Church served as the cathedral and seat of the diocese. [3]
Saint Paul's Church (Petersburg, Virginia) St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Alexandria, Virginia) St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Hanover, Virginia) St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Haymarket, Virginia) St. Paul's Episcopal Church (King George, Virginia) Saint Paul's Episcopal Church (Norfolk, Virginia) St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Richmond, Virginia ...
St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church is a historic Catholic church complex in Newport News, Virginia, United States. It was built 1916–1917 and is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, brick, Classical Revival style longitudinal-plan church. It was designed by the Carl Ruehrmurd of Richmond, Virginia.
There are a remarkable group of unusually large, architect-designed houses and churches. Notable non-residential buildings include St. Bridget's Catholic Church (1950) and St. Stephen's Episcopal Church. Located in the district is the separately listed Green's Farm (Huntley). [3] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2012. [1]