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Completed in 1914 for $30,000, [3] the building is an example of the Tudor Gothic Revival style and featured stained glass windows described by the Indianapolis Historic Preservation Commission as "extraordinary." [4] Later additions to the church include a Kilgen pipe organ in 1936 and a Sunday school wing in 1958. [2]
Indianapolis, Ind.: Saint John the Evangelist Church. ISBN 0961613408. Widner, Rev. Thomas C. (1984). Our Family Album, A Journey of Faith: Sketches of the People and Parishes of the Archdiocese of Indianapolis: in Celebration of her 150th Anniversary. Indianapolis, IN: Criterion Press. Widner, Rev. Thomas & Sister Marie Wolf (1980-07-11).
In 1968, the family moved from Pennsylvania to Indianapolis, Indiana, where Dr. Sease was named president of Indiana Central College in 1970. Dr. Sease was seen [by whom?] as a civic-minded educator who could use his political connections to reshape the image of the school. Gene helped the school expand towards Indianapolis, which resulted in a ...
311 N. New Jersey St, Indianapolis Founded in 1858, current church dedicated in 1910 [36] St. Michael the Archangel 3354 W. 30th St, Indianapolis Current church dedicated in 1954 [37] Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral: 1347 N. Meridian St, Indianapolis Classical Revival-style church built between 1906 and 1907 [38] St. Philip Neri
Crown Hill Cemetery is a historic rural cemetery located at 700 West 38th Street in Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana.The privately owned cemetery was established in 1863 at Strawberry Hill, whose summit was renamed "The Crown", a high point overlooking Indianapolis.
The Journal purchased several other Indianapolis newspapers during Sulgrove's ownership. These included the Atlas in 1861, the Evening Gazette in 1867, the Evening Commercial in 1871, and the Daily Times in 1879. [2] John C. New, a banker, attorney, and leading Indianapolis-area Republican figure, purchased the Journal in 1880. New's leadership ...
When Bishop de St. Palais visited Indianapolis in the early 1870s, he stayed at the church rectory and used the parish church as the pro-cathedral for the diocese. [ 48 ] [ 81 ] [ 82 ] His successor, Bishop Chatard, requested permission from Leo XIII in 1878 to establish the bishop's residence and chancery at Indianapolis. [ 47 ]
St. Mary Catholic Church (St. Marienkirche) is a parish of the Roman Catholic Church in Indianapolis, Indiana, in the Archdiocese of Indianapolis. Originally founded in 1858 to serve the city's growing German population, it is noted for its historic parish church at the corner of New Jersey and Vermont streets, which was completed in 1912.