Georgia Plain Baptist Church
Georgia Plain Baptist Church | |
44°43′15″N 73°10′2″W / 44.72083°N 73.16722°W / 44.72083; -73.16722 | |
Area | less than one acre |
---|---|
Built | 1877 (1877) |
Architectural style | Gothic Revival |
MPS | Religious Buildings, Sites and Structures in Vermont MPS |
NRHP reference No. | 01000213[1] |
Added to NRHP | March 2, 2001 |
The Georgia Plain Baptist Church is a historic church in Georgia, Vermont. Built in 1877 for a congregation established in 1793, it is a well-preserved example of High Gothic Victorian architecture. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2001.[1] The congregation is affiliated with the American Baptist Churches of Vermont and New Hampshire.
Description and history
The Georgia Plain Baptist Church stands in the rural crossroads village of Georgia Plains in southwestern Georgia, on the west side of Stonebridge Road near its junction with Plains Road. It is a single-story brick building, built out of red brick laid in English bond, with sand-colored brick trim. The main block has a steeply pitched gable roof, and is fronted by a three-part facade. The right element of the facade is the main tower, rising as a buttressed square to a louvered belfry at the base of the slate-clad steeple. The main entrance is in its base, set in a Gothic arched opening, with a small lancet window above. The left element of the facade is a lower gabled section, with a less ornate secondary entrance. The central part of the facade houses a large stained glass Gothic-arched window. The interior retains many original features, including carved woodwork, a pressed metal ceiling, and original lighting fixtures.[2]
The Georgia Baptists were organized in 1793, and were the town's second religious congregation after the Congregationalists. They at first met for many years in Georgia's town hall, before building their first church at this site in 1848. That church burned down in 1876, and this church was completed the following year. The congregation is distinctive for ordaining the first female pastor of any denomination in the state of Vermont, Rev. Grace Brooks in 1919. The congregation's longest-serving and most influential minister was the Rev. Alvah Sabin, a Georgia native and United States Representative who was pastor for 53 years.[2]
See also
References
- ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- ^ a b Barb Shubinski (1997). "NRHP nomination for Georgia Plain Church". National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-10-31. with photos from 1997
External links
- Georgia Plain Baptist Church web site
- v
- t
- e
- Billado Block
- Sheldon Boright House
- Brigham Academy
- Community Baptist Church and Parsonage
- District No. 2 School
- District No. 8 School
- Enosburg Congregational Memorial Church
- Enosburg Opera House
- Evarts-McWilliams House
- Fairfield Street School
- First Congregational Church of Swanton
- Fletcher Union Church
- Georgia Plain Baptist Church
- Giroux Furniture Company Building
- Solomon Goodrich Homestead
- Hathaway's Tavern
- Houghton House
- Kemp-Shepard House
- Dr. B. J. Kendall Company
- L'Ecole Saintes-Anges
- Methodist Episcopal Church
- Montgomery House
- Ovitt Grist Mill
- Parish of the Holy Trinity
- Perley Block
- Moses P. Perley House
- Quincy Hotel
- Richford Primary School
- Richwood Estate
- Rockledge
- St. Albans Town Hall
- St. Ann's Episcopal Church
- St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church
- St. George's Catholic Church
- St. John's Episcopal Church
- Swanton School
- Sweat-Comings Company House
- U.S. Inspection Station-East Richford, Vermont
- U.S. Inspection Station-Richford, Vermont
- U.S. Inspection Station-West Berkshire, Vermont
- United States Post Office and Custom House
- Warner Home
- West Berkshire School
- F.W. Wheeler House
- Willard Manufacturing Company Building
- Bridge 9
- Bridge 12
- Bridge Number VT105-10
- Comstock Covered Bridge
- Douglas & Jarvis Patent Parabolic Truss Iron Bridge
- East Fairfield Covered Bridge
- Fairfax Covered Bridge
- Fuller Covered Bridge
- Hectorville Covered Bridge
- Hopkins Covered Bridge
- Hutchins Covered Bridge
- Longley Covered Bridge
- Missisquoi River Bridge
- Swanton Covered Railroad Bridge
- West Hill Covered Bridge