• 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

First Parish Church Congregational, Dover, New Hampshire

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.

Founded in 1633, First Parish Church is the oldest congregation in the state of New Hampshire. The church’s fifth home, is a Federal style brick structure, with steeple modeled after that of The First Religious Society of Newburyport, Massachusetts, was designed and built by Captain James Davis in 1829. The interior has undergone extensive changes since the building’s construction, the first in 1878 when the organ was moved to the front of the sanctuary, the box-style pews were removed, and the current arced slip pews were installed. In 1945, the side galleries were removed, a colonial-style chancel area built, and the pews and walls painted white. The exterior has undergone few changes since its construction. Donald Bryant, the author of The History of the First Parish Church, wrote that with all of the significant changes to the city of Dover since the church’s founding, “no buildings and no institutions [remain] except the First Parish Church. In the fabric of Dover’s history it continues as the single living thread that runs from the beginning to the present and will run unbroken into the future.”

218 Central Avenue,
Dover, New Hampshire
03820

Filed Under: New Hampshire Tagged With: Church, Congregational, Federal Style

St. Anthony of Padua Church, New Bedford, Massachusetts

4 Comments

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.

Founded in 1895, the St. Anthony of Padua Church was established to serve the needs of the growing French Canadian Catholic population in New Bedford. Its current structure, a Romanesque style church designed by Canadian architect Joseph Venne, was dedicated in 1912 after a ten-year construction period. Much of the church’s elaborate interior was done under the direction of Italian sculptor John Castagnoli, who was a resident of New Bedford. In 1952, a significant renovation was completed on the church’s interior under the guidance of Italian architect and artist Guido Nincheri, replacing the original pulpit, adding stained glass windows and paintings of each of the four evangelists: Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Four times a year, the 5,000 light bulbs set in the arches and ceiling illuminate the beautifully ornate interior.

1359 Acushnet Avenue
New Bedford, Massachusetts

Filed Under: Massachusetts Tagged With: Catholic, Church, Romanesque

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • 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