Records With Access Point "Church buildings"
27 results found (25 digitized image(s) available).
Andy Morasse photographs
Fonds - 1965, 1968
P17
Andrew Morasse was born in Port Colborne, Ontario, and attended school there and later at Welland. He came to St. Thomas University as a student in Liberal Arts Program in 1965. These photographs were taken during several trips over to the Miramichi for that purpose during the summer of 1968. They were intended and used for a “Miramichi Night”, held October 12th, 1968 at the Town Hall Auditorium in Newcastle, NB.
St. Mark’s United Church in Douglastown, NB
Item - 1968
P17\51
This church was formerly St. Mark’s Presbyterian Church, which was built in 1875. The rigging on the steeple is for the paint job being done in the summer of 1968.
St. James and St. John’s United Church in Newcastle, NB
Item - 1968
P17\85
Built c. 1829 or 1830, this church was formerly St. James Presbyterian Church. This beautiful church was designed by William Murray, a renowned Miramichi architect, and is located on King George Highway.
Dr. Pedolin photographs
Fonds - [ca.1895]-[ca.1905]
P34
PEDOLIN, FERDINAND LOREK (1849-1913)
PEDOLIN, FERDINAND LOREK, doctor and businessman; mayor of Newcastle, 1911-12; b. Fredericton, 29 Jul 1849, s/o Peter Pedolin and Elizabeth Ross; m. 1877, Mary T. Fowler, d/o Elijah Fowler and Jane MacAllister; d. Newcastle, 7 Jun 1913.
Ferdinand L. Pedolin's grandfather, John Pedolin, was born in Switzerland and his father, Peter Pedolin, was a native of Holland. John Pedolin died in Fredericton in 1824, and Peter Pedolin had a confectionery and grocery business there in the 1830s. Fredericton is cited as Ferdinand L. Pedolin's place of birth, but all members of the family were residing in Woodstock in 1851, where Peter Pedolin was a merchant. They returned to Fredericton sometime before 1861.
After finishing his schooling in Fredericton, Pedolin spent three years as a student at Harvard Medical College (MD 1869). When he returned to New Brunswick,he practiced at Doaktown, then at Hartt's Mills in York County, then at Doaktown again until 1885,...
Interior St. James Presbyterian Church
Item - 1895-1905
P34\47
With rev. at the pulpit and three choir members at the altar. Altar and columns decorated with boughs. The church later became St. James and St. John United when the church joined the Methodist in 1925. Newcastle, NB.
St. James and St. John United Church
Item - 1895-1905
P34\79
The church was constructed after the Great Fire of 1825 and was completed in 1830 on the existing stone foundation that had been the Church of Scotland. The church was designed by Presbyterian Scot, William Murray. The church has undergone a variety of renovations over the years. Newcastle, New Brunswick.