翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ First Presidency of Alan García
・ First Presidency of Carlos Andrés Pérez
・ First Presidency of Fernando Belaúnde
・ First Presidency of Rafael Caldera
・ First Price
・ First principal meridian
・ First principle
・ First Principles of Instruction
・ First Priority
・ First Priority Music
・ First Prize (music diploma)
・ First Prize for the Cello
・ First Presbyterian Church (Macon, Georgia)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Manhattan)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Mankato, Minnesota)
First Presbyterian Church (Marion, Iowa)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Marion, North Carolina)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Marshall, Missouri)
・ First Presbyterian Church (McAlester, Oklahoma)
・ First Presbyterian Church (McMinnville, Tennessee)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Memphis, Tennessee)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Mineral Wells, Texas)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Mount Holly, New Jersey)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Murfreesboro, Tennessee)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Muscatine, Iowa)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Napa, California)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Napoleon, Ohio)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Nashville, Arkansas)
・ First Presbyterian Church (Nashville, Tennessee)
・ First Presbyterian Church (New Brunswick, New Jersey)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

First Presbyterian Church (Marion, Iowa) : ウィキペディア英語版
First Presbyterian Church (Marion, Iowa)

First Presbyterian Church is located in Marion, Iowa, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.
==History==
The church was organized on February 5, 1842. There were originally nine members, many of whom transferred their membership from the Linn Grove Presbyterian Church near Springville, Iowa. It was originally called the Old School Presbyterian Church. While that generally refers to it being conservative, it also meant in the years before the Civil War that it was anti-slavery.〔
Initially the congregation met for services in public buildings, including the Linn County courthouse, which was in Marion at that time. There was no pastor in the early years. The Rev. Salmon Cowles, a Presbyterian missionary based in Keokuk, visited about four times a year. The Marion and Linn Groves churches shared the Rev. J.S. Fullerton as a pastor starting in 1849.
Property on Market Street (now Tenth Street) was purchased for $60 in 1851.〔 It took five years to build a church building with volunteer labor. In 1852 a Sunday School was organized. At the same time the Rev. Alexander S. Marshall began a nearly 40 year pastorate with the church. He saw that construction was finished on the church.
The congregation grew and planning for a new building was begun. Construction on the present Gothic Revival structure began in July 1884. Stone for the building was hauled in from Stone City, Iowa. The church was dedicated on September 27, 1885.
The Westminster House was the first major addition since the church was built, and was built from 1954-56. A kitchen and a new Moller organ was purchased at the same time. A major remodeling project occurred in 1967, which included a new ceiling and new pews. A 1988 addition was built and it included a lounge, choir room, and pastor's office. The lot northwest of the church was acquired in 1989, the building on it was razed and it was made into a parking lot.
In 1997 the sanctuary was renovated with new carpet and new pew cushions. The following year the hand bell choirs were established. The first part of a three-phase restoration project of the stained glass windows was completed in 1999.
In 2000 Pastor Howard Chapman served a Presbyterian church in Scotland during the summer months, and First Presbyterian hosted Scottish Pastor Eric Foggit and his family. In 2001 the second phase of the stained glass window restoration was completed and the renovation of the Westminster House chapel as a multi-purpose room as well as a chapel was completed.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「First Presbyterian Church (Marion, Iowa)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.