Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Union Church of Vinalhaven

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Built
  
1899 (1899)

NRHP Reference #
  
84001388

Area
  
1,200 m²

Architect
  
John Calvin Stevens

Built by
  
Nelson,Otto

Opened
  
1899

Added to NRHP
  
19 July 1984

Union Church of Vinalhaven

Location
  
E. Main St., Vinalhaven, Maine

Architectural style
  
Shingle style architecture

Similar
  
Browns Head Light, Saddleback Ledge Light, Bay of Fundy, City Theater, Lancaster Block

The Union Church of Vinalhaven is a historic church on East Main Street in the center of Vinalhaven, Maine. Built in 1899, it is a high quality example of Shingle style architecture, designed by one of its major promoters, John Calvin Stevens. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.

Description and history

The Union Church stands on the south side of East Main Street in downtown Vinalhaven, just east of its junction with Atlantic Avenue. The church is a single-story wood frame structure, with a gabled roof and shingled exterior. The long side of the building faces the street, with a square tower projecting at the right end. The tower rises to a louvered belfry and a pyramidal roof, whose corners have projecting hip sections over the piers that flank the belfry louvers. The main entrance is at the base of the tower, sheltered by a gabled porch. A wide wall dormer is set in the center of that facade, with a three-part Gothic window. The west-facing gable end is also adorned with a large Gothic window, with small oriel windows on either side.

The church was built in 1899 by Otto Nelson to a design by Maine's best-known architect of the turn of the 20th century, John Calvin Stevens. Stevens was a major promoter of the Shingle style, and this church is an excellent example of the style. It was built to replace an earlier structure, built in 1860 when Vinalhaven was a major granite quarrying and shipping center.

References

Union Church of Vinalhaven Wikipedia