• Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
  • Map
  • Book
  • Prayer

Sacred Spaces of New England

Places that elicit contemplation, reflection and inspiration.

  • Connecticut
  • Maine
  • Massachusetts
  • New Hampshire
  • Rhode Island
  • Vermont

Church

Round Church, Richmond, Vermont

Leave a Comment

Loading…

Click here to view the 360-degree panoramic image together with Google Cardboard and your iPhone, or to view it fullscreen on your iPhone.

Completed in 1813 under the leadership of local craftsman William Rhodes, the Federal style Round Church is a sixteen-sided meetinghouse that was built to serve the community as a meeting place and a church for the area’s five Protestant congregations. Nevertheless, shortly after the building was constructed, several of the individual congregations built their own churches and the structure reverted to the Town of Richmond to become exclusively a meetinghouse beginning in 1880. In 1973, the Round Church closed due to safety concerns. As a result, the Richmond Historical Society was formed and with the generosity of the community’s time and money as well as its ability to secure grants, the Round Church remains today—serving as a testament to the now rare traditional New England sixteen-sided meetinghouse.

25 Round Church Road
Richmond, VT 05477

Filed Under: Vermont Tagged With: Church, Federal Style, Meetinghouse, Multi-Denominational, Multipurpose

St. Peter’s by the Sea, Cape Neddick, Maine

Leave a Comment

Loading…

Click here to view the 360-degree panoramic image together with Google Cardboard and your iPhone, or to view it fullscreen on your iPhone.

Nestled on top of Christian Hill within a densely wooded area of Cape Neddick, which overlooks the Gulf of Maine, resides St. Peter’s by the Sea. Built on the location where open air church services had been held during the summers since 1850, this Episcopal chapel continues the tradition. Consecrated in 1898, the rustic stone and wood structure is built in the Richardsonian Romanesque style, which draws upon 11th and 12th century southern French, Spanish and Italian Romanesque architecture. Its location is intentional, as the family who bequeathed the land and funded St. Peter’s construction wanted the Church’s cross to be visible to the fishermen at sea.

535 Shore Road
Cape Neddick, ME 03902

Filed Under: Maine Tagged With: Church, Episcopal, Richardsonian Romanesque, Romanesque

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 22
  • Page 23
  • Page 24
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 34
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to the Sacred Spaces of New England Newsletter:



Tags

Baptist Baroque Byzantine Byzantine Romanesque Carpenter Gothic Catholic Chapel Chautauqua Church Classical Revival Colonial Congregational English Gothic Episcopal Federal Style Georgian Gothic Revival Gothic Style Greek Revival High Victorian Gothic Islam Italianate Italian Renaissance Style Lutheran Meetinghouse Methodist Modern Mosque Multi-Denominational Multipurpose Muslim Nondenominational Orthodox Christianity Presbyterian Quaker Queen Anne Reform Judaism Richardsonian Romanesque Romanesque Romanesque Revival Secular Shingle Style Synagogue Unitarian Universalist Vernacular

Recent Additions

  • Saint Joseph Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Holy Trinity Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Saint George Greek Orthodox Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • The First Church of Deerfield, Deerfield, Massachusetts
  • Uxbridge Friends Meetinghouse, Uxbridge, Massachusetts

Copyright © 2012–2025 - Seth Thompson