Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Douglaston Hill Historic District is a national historic district in Douglaston, Queens, New York. It includes 83 contributing buildings and two contributing sites. The buildings include Zion Episcopal Church (1830), houses and garages, and commercial buildings. The sites are Zion cemetery and public park.
Zion Episcopal Church. Zion Church is an inclusive Episcopal congregation in Douglaston, New York with members from throughout the borough of Queens, and from Nassau County. Zion is within the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island, and is one of the oldest churches in Queens, standing at the top of the hill overlooking Douglaston and Little Neck.
The Cathedral of the Incarnation is an Episcopal cathedral in Garden City, New York.It is the seat of the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island.. Built to the memory of Alexander Turney Stewart, the Cathedral of the Incarnation is the only cathedral in the United States funded by a single person, and the only one that is built in memory of a single individual.
Cathedral of Saint Markella (Genuine Orthodox Church of America) (not in communion with the Ecumenical Patriarch) 40°46′50″N 73°54′38″W / 40.780586°N 73.910654°W / 40.780586; -73.910654 ( Cathedral of Saint Markella (Astoria, New
Church Image Built Designated Location Description Affiliation San Jose de los Jemez Mission: 1621–26 2012 Jemez Springs, NM: Spanish Colonial: Roman Catholic
Zion Episcopal Church Complex and Harmony Cemetery is a national historic district comprising a historic Episcopal church complex and cemetery located at Morris in Otsego County, New York. The complex consists of the church, rectory (1893), and parish house (1901).
The Episcopal Diocese of Long Island is the diocese of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America with jurisdiction over the counties of Kings, Queens, Nassau and Suffolk, which comprise Long Island, New York. It is in Province 2 and its cathedral, the Cathedral of the Incarnation, is located in Garden City, as are its diocesan ...
The building became Zion Lutheran Church in 1892, when that congregation was founded. It is now Zion-St. Mark's Church. [ 3 ] The German-speaking congregation grew rapidly with the influx of mass immigration from Germany to the United States at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries and merged with St. Mark's Evangelical ...