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The Richmond Virginia Temple is the 177th operating temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, located in Glen Allen, Virginia, a suburb of Richmond. [5] The intent to build the temple was announced on April 1, 2018, by church president Russell M. Nelson during general conference . [ 6 ]
The Masonic Temple in Richmond, Virginia is a Richardsonian Romanesque style building built during 1888–1893, designed by Jackson C. Gott. [3] The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [1] It is a prominent building in downtown Richmond.
The neighbouring Richmond Bethel Mennonite Church, which has both English and Chinese congregations, and four ideally situated acres, had rejected the temple's proposal to purchase their property and relocate them. In 2010 new expansion plans where submitted to the City of Richmond the revised plan was 76% larger than the plan in 2005.
The temple is recognized as the city of Richmond's "Point of Pride". It has also won the 125th Centennial Award from the Lieutenant Governor of Canada, for services to the community. For over a decade, the temple has been the first-place winner for Richmond's Landscape and Garden Contest, in the "church/temple" category.
After the Sunshine Revival of February 1926, other Pentecostal assemblies sought affiliation and Richmond Temple became the mother church of a network of Pentecostal churches which became the Pentecostal Church of Australia. In 1937, Greenwood met with the leaders of the Assemblies of God Queensland to unite and form a single denomination.
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Lewis Temple (1800 – 18 May 1854) was an American maker of items used in whaling, [1] blacksmith, abolitionist, and inventor. He was born in slavery in Richmond, Virginia , and moved to the whaling village of New Bedford, Massachusetts during the 1820s, where he worked as a blacksmith.