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The Episcopal Diocese of Michigan is the Episcopal diocese comprising 70 congregations in the southeast part of Michigan. [1] The diocese traces its roots to the founding of St. Paul's, Detroit in 1824. It became a diocese of the Episcopal Church in 1836, one year before the State of Michigan
St. John's Episcopal Church is an antebellum-era church located at 2326 Woodward Avenue (at the corner of Woodward and the Fisher Freeway service drive) in Downtown Detroit, Michigan. It is the oldest church still standing on Woodward Avenue, an area once called Piety Hill for its large number of religious buildings. [ 3 ]
The parish of St. Paul was founded in 1824, by the Rev. Richard Fish Cadle, as the first Episcopal and the first Protestant congregation in what was then Michigan Territory. [2] The original site of St. Paul's church was on Woodward Avenue, between Congress and Larned. In 1851 the church moved to the corner of Congress at Shelby.
Sacred Heart Chaldean Church; Saint Andrew's Memorial Episcopal Church; St. John's–St. Luke's Evangelical Church; St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, 1883 (Detroit, Michigan) St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, 1926 (Detroit, Michigan) St. Sarkis Church (Dearborn, Michigan)
Our Lady of Help Roman Catholic Church (1867) 3156 East Congress, Detroit, MI. Demolished in 1968. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church (1867) 306 North Division Street, Ann Arbor, MI. Cathedral of St. Paul (Erie, Pennsylvania), (1866) 134 W. Seventh St. St. James Episcopal Church, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, (1867),833 West Wisconsin Avenue
St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, now known as St. Matthew's-St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, is a historic Episcopal church located at 8850 Woodward Avenue in Detroit, Michigan, and is part of the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. [1]
The Epiphany Reformed Episcopal parish was founded in 1878 as a place where Anglicans not pledged to the Episcopal bishop of Michigan might worship. [3] In 1880, the congregation built a small frame church, and in 1889 changed their name to Trinity Episcopal. [3] James E. Scripps, owner of The Detroit News, was
Brothers Robert (Jr.) and William Stead ran a wholesale grocery business at the present site of Christ Church until the year 1844. [4] Christ Church Detroit was founded by a group of Episcopalians in 1845, who decided that St. Paul's Church (now St. Paul's Cathedral) was too crowded. [5]