Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
George Augustus Stallings Jr. (born March 17, 1948) is an American religious leader. He was the founder of the Imani Temple African-American Catholic Congregation and was long active in the Black Catholic Movement.
The African-American Catholic Congregation and its Imani Temples are an Independent Catholic church founded by Archbishop George Augustus Stallings Jr., an Afrocentrist and former Catholic priest, in Washington, D.C. Stallings left the Catholic Church in 1989 and was excommunicated in 1990. [1]
By the time of Stone's death in 1787, Haberdeventure had increased in size from 442 acres (1.79 km 2) to 1,077 acres (4.36 km 2). Stone was buried in the family cemetery adjacent to his home. Descendants of Thomas Stone continued to own Haberdeventure until 1936 when the land was sold. The house was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1971.
1 Tour dates. Toggle Tour dates subsection. 1.1 2012. 2 Further live dates. 3 References. ... Sydney Opera House: 13 December 2016 14 December 2016 21 April 2017 ...
Stonehouse is a British comedy-drama [1] television series dramatising the life and times of disgraced British government minister John Stonehouse, first broadcast from 2 to 4 January 2023. The series starred Matthew Macfadyen and Keeley Hawes and was directed by Jon S. Baird from a script by John Preston .
The Whitfield House served primarily as the home for Henry Whitfield, Dorothy Shaeffe Whitfield, and their nine children. [5] The house also served as a place of worship before the first church was built in Guilford, as a meetinghouse for colonial town meetings, as a protective fort for the settlers in case of attack, and as a shelter for travelers between the New Haven and Saybrook colonies. [7]
The house was built in 1845, by David Walker, and is one of a small number of Fayetteville properties to survive the American Civil War (although it was damaged by a shell). It was owned for many years by the Stone family, and reacquired by a Stone descendant in the late 1960s with an eye toward its restoration.
The original stone house was built in 1740. [3] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1995, as a highly stylized version of a typical Hudson Valley Dutch Colonial house, the use of brick and gambrel roof in its construction reflecting the influence of migrants from New Jersey and New York City, where that was more common. [2]