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South Congregational Church, Chapel, Ladies Parlor, and Rectory

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Built
  
1851, 1857, 1889, 1893

Address
  
Brooklyn, NY 11231, USA

Added to NRHP
  
4 November 1982

NRHP Reference #
  
82001183

Area
  
3,642 m²

South Congregational Church, Chapel, Ladies Parlor, and Rectory

Location
  
President and Court Sts., New York, New York

Architectural style
  
Romanesque Revival architecture

Similar
  
Plymouth Church, Saddle River County P, Headless Horseman Hayrides, Franklin D Roosevelt President, Coney Island

The South Congregational Church is a former Congregational and United Church of Christ church building complex located on the intersection of Court and President Streets in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn, New York City. The complex consisting of a church, original chapel, ladies parlour and rectory was landmarked by the Landmarks Preservation Commission on March 23, 1983. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.

The chapel was built 1851 and the church in 1857. The ladies parlor was built in 1889 to designs by English-American architect Frederick Charles Merry (d.1900) and the rectory building in 1893 to designs by architect Woodruff Leeming. The church is noteworthy as one of Brooklyn’s finest examples of the Early Romanesque Revival architectural style. The designers of the chapel and church remain unknown. In 1874, the Rev. Dr. Albert Josiah Lyman became pastor of the South Church, Brooklyn, which church he served for forty-one years.

The location is believed to have been selected by the famous preacher and abolitionist Henry Ward Beecher, father to author Harriet Beecher Stowe. As of 2008, it had a well-preserved façade but had been adaptively reused as an office and multi-residences.

References

South Congregational Church, Chapel, Ladies Parlor, and Rectory Wikipedia


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