St. John's Episcopal Church (Roanoke, Virginia)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/St._John's_Episcopal_Church_(Roanoke,_Virginia) an entity of type: Thing

St. John's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church in Roanoke, Virginia, United States. It was built in 1891–1892, and is a Gothic style blue-gray limestone church designed by Charles M. Burns of Philadelphia. It has a nave-plan with side aisles, a corner bell tower, a sacristy wing, and a transverse chapel and narthex to the rear. The nave features a hammerbeam roof and wooden arcading and is illuminated by stained glass windows in the clerestory and side aisle walls including several by Louis Comfort Tiffany. Attached to the church by a stone addition built in 1958, is a Tudor Revival style Parish House built in 1923. rdf:langString
rdf:langString St. John's Episcopal Church (Roanoke, Virginia)
rdf:langString St. John's Episcopal Church
rdf:langString St. John's Episcopal Church
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xsd:date 1991-08-23
rdf:langString Burns, Charles Marquedant; et al.
rdf:langString Gothic, Tudor Revival
rdf:langString –1892, 1923
rdf:langString St. John's Episcopal Church, June 2010
rdf:langString Virginia Landmarks Register
xsd:date 1991-06-19
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rdf:langString Virginia#USA
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rdf:langString St. John's Episcopal Church is a historic Episcopal church in Roanoke, Virginia, United States. It was built in 1891–1892, and is a Gothic style blue-gray limestone church designed by Charles M. Burns of Philadelphia. It has a nave-plan with side aisles, a corner bell tower, a sacristy wing, and a transverse chapel and narthex to the rear. The nave features a hammerbeam roof and wooden arcading and is illuminated by stained glass windows in the clerestory and side aisle walls including several by Louis Comfort Tiffany. Attached to the church by a stone addition built in 1958, is a Tudor Revival style Parish House built in 1923. A church history was printed during the centennial of the building. "The Church in Roanoke" is a historical sermon, preached by invitation on the occasion of the opening of Christ Church, Roanoke, (the old St. John's Church on Church Avenue) 14 December 1902, and repeated in St. John's Church, Jefferson Street and Elm Avenue, February 8, 1914. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.
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