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The following is a list of the Episcopal Church cathedrals in the United States and its territories. The dioceses are grouped into nine provinces , the first eight of which, for the most part, correspond to regions of the United States .
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.
First Unitarian Church of Detroit: Church of Christ of Detroit 2870 Woodward (at Edmund Place) 1889 Detroit Destroyed by a fire in May 2014 Temple Beth-El: Bonstelle Theatre 3424 Woodward 1902 Detroit Cathedral Church of St. Paul: 4800 Woodward (at Hancock) 1908 Detroit Our Lady of the Rosary Church: Saint Joseph's Episcopal Church
St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, 1883 (Detroit, Michigan) St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, 1926 (Detroit, Michigan) Saint Mary of Good Counsel Catholic Church (Adrian, Michigan) St. Mary Roman Catholic Church (Detroit) St. Mary's Church Complex Historic District (Monroe, Michigan) Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church; St. Patrick's Parish ...
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)
Development moving again for long-stalled Perfecting Church in Detroit. Gannett. Dana Afana, Detroit Free Press. June 24, 2024 at 3:05 AM.
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
It was created by Pope John Paul II on January 11, 1982, as the Apostolic Exarchate of United States of America for the Chaldeans, [2] covering the entire United States.. It was elevated to an eparchy, an Eastern-rite Catholic diocese, led by an eparch (bishop) on August 3, 1985.