Court Street Methodist Church

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Court_Street_Methodist_Church an entity of type: Thing

Court Street Methodist Church, which for a time also was known as Rock County Appliance and TV, is a historic church at 36 S. Main Street in Janesville, Wisconsin, United States. It was built in 1868 and was renovated by Masonic organization during 1905–1906. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. Its NRHP nomination states: It is 50 by 138 feet (15 m × 42 m) in plan, designed in a restrained Second Empire style. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Court Street Methodist Church
rdf:langString Court Street Methodist Church
rdf:langString Court Street Methodist Church
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xsd:integer 1089887084
xsd:date 1977-11-17
xsd:integer 18681905
xsd:integer 36
rdf:langString Wisconsin#USA
xsd:integer 77000045
xsd:string 42.68194444444445 -89.0213888888889
rdf:langString Court Street Methodist Church, which for a time also was known as Rock County Appliance and TV, is a historic church at 36 S. Main Street in Janesville, Wisconsin, United States. It was built in 1868 and was renovated by Masonic organization during 1905–1906. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. Its NRHP nomination states: The Court Street Methodist Church is one of the most unusual commercial buildings in downtown Janesville. It is significant not only for the quality of its architecture, as the best preserved of two remaining Second Empire commercial buildings in the city, with a fine two-story raised sanctuary, but also for its unique function as a combined commercial and religious building, which represented a Victorian bringing-together of worship and commerce. It was constructed with retail store fronts on the ground story, and the sanctuary on the second and thirdfloors. This arrangement was not unlike that utilized for the four story Methodist Church Block in Chicago, built on the southeast corner of Clark and Washington Streets in 1872 and razed for a new 21 story edifice in 1923. This Gothic style successor continues the combination arrangement to this day; its sanctuary is perched 20 floors up on top of a small skyscraper, and surmounted by an eight story spire. It is 50 by 138 feet (15 m × 42 m) in plan, designed in a restrained Second Empire style.
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xsd:gYear 1868
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