Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
St. James Episcopal Cathedral, a church within the Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin, has been doing outreach to farmworkers in the Central Valley for several years.
St. James' Church is an Episcopal parish church located at the intersection of Madison Avenue and 71st Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City.. Founded in May 1810 as a summer chapel for New Yorkers with country homes north of the then city, it has grown into one of the largest Episcopal churches in New York City.
St. James' Episcopal Church, or St. James' in-the-City, as it is commonly called, to distinguish it from the St. James' Episcopal Church in South Pasadena, is a historic Episcopal church, located in the Wilshire Center area of Los Angeles, California, between Koreatown and Hancock Park.
St. James' Episcopal Church (Manhattan) St. James' Episcopal Church and Parish House, The Bronx, New York, listed on the NRHP in Bronx County; St. James Episcopal Church, part of the Skaneateles Historic District in Skaneateles, New York; St. James Episcopal Church (Watkins Glen, New York), listed on the NRHP in Schuyler County
The Church of St. James the Apostle, or as it is known today as St. James Episcopal Church or Iglesia Episcopal de Santiago is an Episcopal church in Oakland, California, United States. The church has been providing weekly services without break since 1858. It is a California Historical Landmark. [1]
St. James's historic parish church was built 1866–1867. A rectangular Gothic Revival style stone church, it has a high pitched gable roof and an offset square entrance tower topped by a tall octagonal spire. Attached to the church is the Tudor Revival style parish hall added in 1909. [3]: 3–4
St. James' Episcopal Church and Parish House is a historic Episcopal church at 2500 Jerome Avenue and 190th Street, in the Fordham neighborhood of The Bronx in New York City. It was founded July 5, 1853, becoming the first Episcopal parish in Fordham.
St. James Episcopal Church would go on to serve Tampa's African-American community for more than a century. [6] Nearly as old was Tampa's third white Episcopal church, the House of Prayer, founded in 1907. The church served the population of Tampa Heights, and by 1926 was named a parish by the local