Religion

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          Religion

            68 Archival description results for Religion

            6 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
            St. Patrick's Church
            CA ETRC P020-003-06-D002a-P541 · Item · 1910, copied 1977
            Part of Eastern Townships Heritage Foundation fonds

            Item is a photograph of St. Patrick's Catholic Church, located in Sherbrooke at the corner of Gordon and King Streets. The church building was built in 1859 for the Sherbrooke Methodist Church and was later sold to the Irish Catholic congregation to become the St. Patrick's Catholic Church. The building was destroyed by fire in 1912.

            CA ETRC P998-088-08-003-P001 · Item · [193-?]
            Part of Eastern Townships Resource Centre Graphic Material collection

            Photomontage of the clergy of Richmond since 1890. They are identified as: Mgr. Antoine Racine; Mgr. Paul-Stanislas Larocque; Mgr. Alphonse-Osias Gagnon; Mgr. Hubert-Olivier Chalifoux; Frederick-Patrick Dignan; Mgr. Joseph-Alfred-Élie Dufresne; A.-J. Perrin; Mgr. Olivier-Zacharie Letendre; Joseph-Louis-Arthur Coté; Mgr. Marie-Joseph-Hermann Morin. Also included is a photograph of a house probably the presbytery, and the church of Saint Claude in 1910.

            CA ETRC UC007-003-D006-003 · Item · [195-?]
            Part of Wesley United Church (Beebe) fonds

            The Union Meeting House was built in 1866 by Jeremiah Spear, inspired by the architecture of American "meeting houses". The Union Meeting House was used by several denominations, but Adventists took possession of it in 1896, the people of that faith being the last in Beebe Plain not to have a church of their own.

            CA ETRC UC007-003-D006-004 · Item · [ca. 1988]
            Part of Wesley United Church (Beebe) fonds

            The Union Meeting House was built in 1866 by Jeremiah Spear, inspired by the architecture of American "meeting houses". The Union Meeting House was used by several denominations, including the Methodists, but Adventists took possession of it in 1896, the people of that faith being the last in Beebe Plain not to have a church of their own.