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First Church, Dunedin : ウィキペディア英語版
First Church of Otago

First Church is a prominent church in the New Zealand city of Dunedin. It is located in the heart of the city on Moray Place, 100 metres to the south of the city centre. The church is the city's primary Presbyterian church. The building is regarded as the most impressive of New Zealand's nineteenth-century churches,〔Knight & Wales (1988), p. 128〕 and is listed by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust as a Category I structure.
==Earlier structures==
Prior to the construction of the church, smaller earlier buildings had been used by the congregation,〔Herd & Griffiths (1980) pp. 61–62.〕 but the rapid rise in the city's population meant that a larger, more permanent structure was necessary.
The original First Church stood close to the former beach in the city's lower High Street. This was a rough, weatherboard building, erected very quickly, and capable of holding some 200 people. It was opened in September 1848, within six months of the arrival of the city's first permanent European settlers from Scotland.〔Reed (1956), p. 77〕 So hasty was the construction of the building that early congregations had to remain standing, as seating was not installed until three months later.〔Croot (1999), p. 55〕
A stone church was built in 1850 which expanded and extended the original structure, doubling its capacity. This building not only served as a church, but, in the city's early days, was also a school, public lecture hall, and served as the Otago Provincial Council chambers. The building was utilitarian, and may have only ever been intended as a temporary solution, as plans for a more stately building were being mooted as early as 1856. After construction of the permanent church, the 1848 and 1850 buildings were used as a wool store, but were destroyed by fire in 1865.〔
From 1864 a third structure ("The Interim Church") was used, on a site above the previous buildings on Dowling Street. A sturdy wooden structure on a stone base, it had seating for 600, and was used until the present building was ready for use in 1873. The wooden building was dismantled and moved to Fryatt Street, where is served as a tram workshop; part of the original stone foundations on Dowling Street are still visible adjoining a city council car park.〔Croot (1999), p. 56〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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