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St. Anthony's Catholic Church (Louisville, Kentucky) St. Boniface's Catholic Church (Louisville, Kentucky) St. Elizabeth of Hungary Roman Catholic Church; Saint Francis of Assisi Complex; St. George's Roman Catholic Church (Louisville) St. James Catholic Church (Louisville, Kentucky) St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church (Louisville, Kentucky)
Calvary Episcopal Church (Louisville, Kentucky) Chestnut Street Baptist Church; Christ Church Cathedral (Louisville, Kentucky) ... St. Mark's Episcopal Church ...
The former St. Anthony's Catholic Church is a redbrick historic Roman Catholic steepled church complex located at 2222-2238 West Market Street in Louisville, Kentucky. Designed by noted local architect William H. Redin in the Gothic Revival style of architecture, it was built in 1887. After a disastrous fire on January 26, 1939, which caused ...
St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church is a Roman Catholic parish church in Louisville, Kentucky. It is the fourth parish in the city and one of the oldest in the Archdiocese of Louisville. [citation needed] Founded as a church for German immigrants on the east side of Louisville in 1853, the church building was completed and dedicated on August ...
Southeast Christian Church, with its main campus in Middletown and three others in the surrounding region, is, as of 2013, the seventh-largest church in the United States. [3] St. Stephen Church [4] is the 38th largest in the US, [3] and has the largest African American congregation in Kentucky. [5]
The fire occurred on the night of March 13, 2021, at the former site of Greater New Hope Community Church in the 200 block of East Jacob Street in Old Louisville. The building the church was ...
Adams likes to joke that she’s been around Zion Baptist Church “for 1,000 years,” but Zion’s legacy in Louisville only stretches back to 1877, about 57 years before Adams was born.
In 1841, recognizing the increased population and importance of Louisville, Gregory XVI suppressed the Diocese of Bardstown and erected the Diocese of Louisville in its place. He designated St. Louis Church in Louisville as its new cathedral. [9] Like the Diocese of Bardstown, the new diocese covered the entire state of Kentucky.