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18 matches on "Mayer "
Springfield photomontage
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Springfield photomontage  Save
Description: This photographic montage shows East Main, St. Raphael Church and St. Raphael Church elementary School (formerly the old Post Office). The view of East Main is taken looking east, from the corner of North Limestone. The Bushnell Building, at the top, just right of center, was designed by Shepley, Rutan and Coolidge in the Renaissance Revival style for Asa S. Bushnell. Located at 14 East Main Street, it was built, in two phases; first in 1893 and again in 1903 and has three 3-story tall arches on the front of the brick building. The first floor was used by the First National Bank, founded by Bushnell, which later when on to become National City Bank. The fifth floor was used as a Masonic Temple and the rest of the building was used as office space. It was used as a department store for many years and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979 with several other surrounding Main Street buildings (address' 6-14). Restoration work has begun to return the building to its original state. It is now being used as the Bushnell Banquet Center. The building at the top center is located at 4 West Main Street, on the corner of North Fountain Avenue. It was originally the Fairbanks Hotel and eventually became the National City Bank Building. The Fairbanks was erected on the site of the former Black's Opera House in 1906. Inside the hotel was the Fairbanks Theater, which could seat up to 16,000. Saint Raphael Church is located at 225 East High Street, at the corner of Spring Street, in Springfield. Designed by architect Charles A. Cregar, construction on this Gothic style brick building began in 1848. Construction on a very large addition began in 1892, and was officially completed with the dedication in 1898. This historic Roman Catholic church has a 184 foot tower, and a somewhat smaller one holding a 16,000 pound bell. The stained glass windows, created by Mayer of Munich, were designed in the twelfth-century manner. In 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. On the left side of the photograph is the round tower of the St. Raphael Church elementary school. This 3-story stone building, built in 1890, began as the United States Post Office with a construction cost of $150,000. Sometimes just called the United States Building, it was designed by Charles Creager in the Romanesque style. By 1898 the space had become inadequate and funding was received to begin renovations. An axillary station was established in the Crowell Publishing building until expansions were complete. A new Post Office was built in 1934 at 150 North Limestone, which is probably when the old Post Office became the Saint Raphael Church elementary school. Formerly located on the corner of East High and South Spring Streets, the building was demolished in the 1960s to create more room for Parish parking. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B09F13_008
Subjects: Springfield (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Churches--Ohio; Roman Catholic Church; Mayer & Co; Shepley, Rutan, and Coolidge; Bushnell, Asa Smith, 1834-1904; Post office buildings Ohio; Catholic elementary schools--United State
Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
 
Saint Raphael Church in Springfield
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Saint Raphael Church in Springfield  Save
Description: The photograph shows the front of Saint Raphael Church with several automobiles parked out front. The church has two large bell towers, with one being significantly taller than the other. Saint Raphael Church is located at 225 East High Street, at the corner of Spring Street, in Springfield. Designed by architect Charles A. Cregar, construction on this Gothic style brick building began in 1848. Construction on a very large addition began in 1892, and was officially completed with the dedication in 1898. This historic Roman Catholic church has a 184 foot tower, and a somewhat smaller one holding a 16, 000 pound bell. The stained glass windows, created by Mayer of Munich, were designed in the twelfth-century manner. In 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B13F05_029_001
Subjects: Churches; Catholic Church; Bell towers; Springfield (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Churches--Ohio; Roman Catholic Church; Mayer & Co; Ohio--History--Pictorial works; Federal Writers' Project
Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
 
Saint Raphael Church in Springfield
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Saint Raphael Church in Springfield  Save
Description: Saint Raphael Church is located at 225 East High Street, at the corner of Spring Street, in Springfield. Designed by architect Charles A. Cregar, construction on this Gothic style brick building began in 1848. Construction on a very large addition began in 1892, and was officially completed with the dedication in 1898. This historic Roman Catholic church has a 184 foot tower, and a somewhat smaller one holding a 16,000 pound bell. The stained glass windows, created by Mayer of Munich, were designed in the twelfth-century manner. In 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B01F11_022
Subjects: Springfield (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Churches--Ohio; Roman Catholic Church; Mayer & Co
Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
 
Saint Raphael Church Springfield, Ohio
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Saint Raphael Church Springfield, Ohio  Save
Description: Saint Raphael Church is located at 225 East High Street, at the corner of Spring Street, in Springfield. Designed by architect Charles A. Cregar, construction on this Gothic style brick building began in 1848. Construction on a very large addition began in 1892, and was officially completed with the dedication in 1898. This historic Roman Catholic church has a 184 foot tower, and a somewhat smaller one holding a 16,000 pound bell. The stained glass windows, created by Mayer of Munich, were designed in the twelfth-century manner. In 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F02_005
Subjects: Springfield (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Churches--Ohio; Roman Catholic Church; Mayer & Co
Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
 
Saint Raphael Church Springfield Ohio
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Saint Raphael Church Springfield Ohio  Save
Description: Saint Raphael Church is located at 225 East High Street, at the corner of Spring Street, in Springfield. Designed by architect Charles A. Cregar, construction on this Gothic style brick building began in 1848. Construction on a very large addition began in 1892, and was officially completed with the dedication in 1898. This historic Roman Catholic church has a 184 foot tower, and a somewhat smaller one holding a 16,000 pound bell. The stained glass windows, created by Mayer of Munich, were designed in the twelfth-century manner. In 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F02_007
Subjects: Springfield (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Churches--Ohio; Roman Catholic Church; Mayer & Co
Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
 
Saint Raphael Church Springfield Ohio
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Saint Raphael Church Springfield Ohio  Save
Description: Saint Raphael Church is located at 225 East High Street, at the corner of Spring Street, in Springfield. Designed by architect Charles A. Cregar, construction on this Gothic style brick building began in 1848. Construction on a very large addition began in 1892, and was officially completed with the dedication in 1898. This historic Roman Catholic church has a 184 foot tower, and a somewhat smaller one holding a 16,000 pound bell. The stained glass windows, created by Mayer of Munich, were designed in the twelfth-century manner. In 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F02_017
Subjects: Springfield (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Churches--Ohio; Roman Catholic Church; Mayer & Co
Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
 
Plum Street Temple photograph
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Description: Interior of Plum Street Temple (Isaac M. Wise Temple), Cincinnati, Ohio. This historic synagogue symbolizes the work of one of the most important figures in nineteenth-century American Jewry, Isaac Mayer Wise (1819-1900). The Bohemian-born rabbi's many achievements include the establishment of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations in 1873, Hebrew Union College in 1875, and the Central Conference of American Rabbis in 1889. Wise's leadership made Cincinnati a center for Reform Judaism in America. The Plum Street Temple, designed by Cincinnati architect James Keys Wilson and built in 1865-1866 for the B'nai Yeshurun congregation during Wise's tenure, is one of the best-preserved Moorish Revival buildings in the United States. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1975. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06022
Subjects: Isaac M. Wise Temple (Cincinnati, Ohio); Wise, Isaac Mayer, 1819-1900; Reform Judaism--United States; Wilson, James Keys, 1828-1894; Synagogue architecture--Mediterranean influences; Multicultural Ohio--Religion in Ohio
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
Saint Raphael Church Springfield, Ohio
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Saint Raphael Church Springfield, Ohio  Save
Description: Saint Raphael Church is located at 225 East High Street, at the corner of Spring Street, in Springfield. Designed by architect Charles A. Cregar, construction on this Gothic style brick building began in 1848. Construction on a very large addition began in 1892, and was officially completed with the dedication in 1898. This historic Roman Catholic church has a 184 foot tower, and a somewhat smaller one holding a 16,000 pound bell. The stained glass windows, created by Mayer of Munich, were designed in the twelfth-century manner. In 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B01F06_045
Subjects: Springfield (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Churches--Ohio; Roman Catholic Church; Mayer & Co
Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
 
Saint Raphael Church Springfield, Ohio
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Saint Raphael Church Springfield, Ohio  Save
Description: Reverse reads: "St. Raphael's Church, Springfield, O. Clark Co." Saint Raphael Church is located at 225 East High Street, at the corner of Spring Street, in Springfield. Designed by architect Charles A. Cregar, construction on this Gothic style brick building began in 1848. Construction on a very large addition began in 1892, and was officially completed with the dedication in 1898. This historic Roman Catholic church has a 184 foot tower, and a somewhat smaller one holding a 16, 000 pound bell. The stained glass windows, created by Mayer of Munich, were designed in the twelfth-century manner. In 1976, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B13F06_009_001
Subjects: Springfield (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Springfield (Ohio)--Pictorial works; Churches--Ohio; Roman Catholic Church; Mayer & Co.; Ohio--History--Pictorial works; Federal Writers' Project.
Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
 
Plum Street Temple from Saint Peter in Chains Cathedral
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Plum Street Temple from Saint Peter in Chains Cathedral  Save
Description: Plum Street Temple, now called the Isaac M. Wise temple, is located at 720 Plum Street at the corner of Eighth Street in Cincinnati, Ohio. Designed by architect James Keys Wilson, the first president of the Cincinnati Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, it is one of only two American temples built in the Byzantine-Moorish (or Byzantine-Saracenic) style, a Germanic style that combined Neo-Byzantine with Moorish Revival. The facade was copied from the Leopoldstadter Tempel in Vienna, Austria.. The building, completed in 1866, is one of the oldest synagogues still standing in the United States and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA1039AV_B01F09_040
Subjects: Cincinnati (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc; Synagogues--Ohio--Cincinnati; Wilson, James Keys, 1828-1894; Wise, Isaac Mayer, 1819-1900
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
Plum Street Temple photograph
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Plum Street Temple photograph  Save
Description: This photograph, an exterior view of the Plum Street Temple in Cincinnati Ohio, was taken September 1937. Located at 720 Plum Street, the Temple, now called Isaac M. Wise Temple, was built by the members of the Lodge Street Synagogue and dedicated on Friday, August 24, 1866. It is one of the oldest synagogues still standing the United States. In 1972 it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. Rabbi Isaac M. Wise (1819-1900), a leader of American Reform Judaism, came to Cincinnati in 1854. He led the effort to build the Plum Street Temple, which was designed by architect James Keys Wilson in the Moorish Revival style. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06188
Subjects: Plum Street Temple (Cincinnati, Ohio); Wise, Isaac Mayer, 1819-1900; Rabbis; Cincinnati (Ohio); Synagogues; Synagogue architecture; Moorish Revival
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
Plum Street Temple photograph
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Plum Street Temple photograph  Save
Description: This photograph, an exterior view of the Plum Street Temple in Cincinnati Ohio, was taken September 1937. Located at 720 Plum Street, the Temple, now called Isaac M. Wise Temple, was built by the members of the Lodge Street Synagogue and dedicated on Friday, August 24, 1866. It is one of the oldest synagogues still standing in the United States. In 1972 it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. Rabbi Isaac M. Wise (1819-1900), a leader of American Reform Judaism, came to Cincinnati in 1854. He led the effort to build the Plum Street Temple, which was designed by architect James Keys Wilson in the Moorish Revival style. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL06189
Subjects: Plum Street Temple (Cincinnati, Ohio); Wise, Isaac Mayer, 1819-1900; Rabbis; Cincinnati (Ohio); Synagogues; Synagogue architecture; Moorish Revival
Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
 
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