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・ Emmanuel Chiroto
・ Emmanuel Christian Academy
・ Emmanuel Christian Academy (Ohio)
・ Emmanuel Christian School
・ Emmanuel Christian School (Tasmania)
・ Emmanuel Christian School (Toledo, Ohio)
・ Emmanuel Christian School, Leicester
・ Emmanuel Christian School, Oxford
・ Emmanuel Christian School, Quebec
・ Emmanuel Christian Seminary
・ Emmanuel Christopher Loblack
・ Emmanuel Chuka Osammor
・ Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze
・ Emmanuel Church
・ Emmanuel Church (Greenwood, Virginia)
Emmanuel Church (Killingworth, Connecticut)
・ Emmanuel Church (Newport, Rhode Island)
・ Emmanuel Church at Brook Hill
・ Emmanuel Church of England Middle School
・ Emmanuel Church of the Evangelical Association of Binghamton
・ Emmanuel Church, Bentley
・ Emmanuel Church, Nottingham
・ Emmanuel Church, Preston
・ Emmanuel Church, Sparkbrook
・ Emmanuel Church, West Hampstead
・ Emmanuel Church, Woodley
・ Emmanuel Church, Wylde Green
・ Emmanuel Clottey
・ Emmanuel Clottey (boxer)
・ Emmanuel Clément


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Emmanuel Church (Killingworth, Connecticut) : ウィキペディア英語版
Emmanuel Church (Killingworth, Connecticut)

Emmanuel Episcopal Church is an historic church building at 50 Emmanuel Church Road in Killingworth, Connecticut.
==History==
The church society was organized in the mid-eighteenth century and known as the Epsicopalian Society of North Bristol (now North Madison) and North Killingworth. In 1800, the society was organized as a parish of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut. The society erected the present church in 1803 and it was called Union Church after 1805.
The church, located off Route 148, was organized in July 10, 1800, by 19 residents of North Madison (then North Bristol, named after the Bristol family who were founding members of the church) and two residents of Killingworth. The church building was completed and formally consecrated by Bishop Hobart of New York in 1817. The first part-time pastor, Nathan Bennett Burgess, was hired in 1801.
The church was slightly enlarged and formally renamed Emmanuel Church, which is Latin for "God is with us," in 1869. The church fell on hard times in the late 19th century. The handful of families remaining in the congregation considered selling the building.
The Rev. George B. Gilbert, a native of Randolph, Vermont, arrived as pastor in 1909. Gilbert, a graduate of Trinity College and Berkeley Divinity School (now associated with Yale University) who lived in Middletown, had just had a falling out with leaders of the Church of the Holy Trinity in Middletown over his informal style and populist political views.
Gilbert revitalized Emmanuel Church, building the congregation and holding picnics that would draw hundreds of people to the remote Killingworth location. During nearly four decades at Emmanuel Church, he also was pastor of the Church of the Epiphany in Durham and St. James Church in Haddam, also in Middlesex County.
When the ''Christian Herald'' was looking for a "traditional country preacher" to be the subject of a book in the late 1930s, the magazine's readers recommended Gilbert as the perfect choice. The autobiography he wrote for the magazine, ''Forty Years a Country Preacher,'' was published by Harper and Brothers in 1939. It topped The New York Times Best Seller list for several months and made Gilbert the subject of a photo spread and article in the July 24, 1939, edition of ''Life'' magazine as well as an article in ''Time''. Gilbert's son, Charles, said his father wrote the book in long hand while recovering from an operation on his foot. The manuscript was typed by his daughter, Virginia Gilbert.
The Rev. Gilbert, who also was a state representative and chaplain of the state Senate, died in 1948 at age 76. Gilbert said his father was a man who believed that dedicating his life to the church also required a dedication to the least fortunate members of society. Gilbert would take in homeless people and parolees from the old Wethersfield State Prison to live and work at his 25-acre farm, which was located at the intersection of Millbrook Road and Prout Hill Road in Middletown. "He liked to help poor people, that was his bent," Gilbert said. "We always had one or two strangers, people who were down on their luck, living with us."
Emmanuel Church was down on its luck within a few years after Gilbert's death. Virginia Gilbert, who worked as the librarian at Woodrow Wilson High School in Middletown, struggled to hold the dwindling congregation together during the 1950s.
In the late 1960s, the church was changed from a parish to a mission to secure additional financial support from the state Episcopal Diocese. The aid included installing electricity at the church for the first time, in 1970.
In 1980 the church joined the Middlesex Area Cluster Ministry, a regional ministry that for the past three decades has provided rotating ministers for small Episcopal churches in Killingworth, Durham, Haddam, Westbrook and Nortford.
The construction of a parish hall and kitchen in 1989 brought Emmanuel Church its first indoor plumbing facilities. The congregation had used an outhouse for the preceding 189 years.

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