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Church Street–Congress Street Historic District

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(Redirected from Church Street-Congress Street Historic District) Historic district in New York, United States

United States historic place
Church Street–Congress Street Historic District
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
U.S. Historic district
First Congregational Church
Church Street–Congress Street Historic District is located in New YorkChurch Street–Congress Street Historic DistrictShow map of New YorkChurch Street–Congress Street Historic District is located in the United StatesChurch Street–Congress Street Historic DistrictShow map of the United States
LocationRoughly bounded by S. Main, Church, Park and Congress Sts., Moravia, New York
Coordinates42°42′36″N 76°25′7″W / 42.71000°N 76.41861°W / 42.71000; -76.41861
Area43 acres (17 ha)
Architectural styleItalianate, Greek Revival, Federal
MPSMoravia MPS
NRHP reference No.92001364
Added to NRHPFebruary 3, 1994

Church Street–Congress Street Historic District is a national historic district located in the village of Moravia in Cayuga County, New York. The district contains 122 contributing buildings and one contributing structure. It is primarily a residential district and preserves several intact examples from the village's earliest period of development, 1810–1830. Numerous residential structures date to the 1830–1840 period and are in the Greek Revival style. This includes the Federal style Congregational Church (1823). Other churches located in the district are the Romanesque style Baptist Church (1874) and the Gothic Revival St. Matthew's Episcopal Church (1897–1898). The district also includes the Powers Library (1880) building and Moravia High School (1924).

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

Selected contributing properties are:

  • U.S. Post Office (1940–41), South Main Street, WPA brick building.
  • St. Matthew's Episcopal Church (1897-1898), 16 Church St. A clapboarded frame church with a corner tower. Has noncontributing church school addition, built c.1960.
  • Powers Library (1880), with Romanesque Revival style for its front, brick building
  • First Congregational Church (1823), now Christ United Methodist Church, Federal in style with three-stage bell tower
  • First Baptist Church (1874), 37 Church Street, brick Romanesque Revival building, expanded in 1891
  • Jewett Mansion (c.1870), 30 Church Street, Second Empire mansion with c.1870 carriage house
  • 35 Congress Street (1875), Italianate
  • Former Moravia High School (1924)
  • St. Matthew's Episcopal Church St. Matthew's Episcopal Church
  • Powers Library (1880), front section Powers Library (1880), front section
  • Powers Library, back section Powers Library, back section
  • First Congregational Church (1823), now Christ United Methodist Church First Congregational Church (1823), now Christ United Methodist Church
  • First Baptist Church First Baptist Church
  • Jewett Mansion Jewett Mansion
  • 35 Congress Street 35 Congress Street
  • Moravia High School, on Church Street Moravia High School, on Church Street

Notes

  1. Note the Church Street-Congress Street HD document states that the U.S. Post Office on South Main Street in Moravia was separately NRHP-listed in 1991. And there were in fact numerous ones covered in a 1988-approved Multiple Resources study "United States Post Offices in New York State - 1858 to 1943 - Thematic Resources" (written by Larry E. Gobrecht, National Register and Survey Coordinator, New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, December 1986) which were identified as NRHP-eligible and separately listed in subsequent years, and the Moravia one is listed in that document's Appendix IV as presumed or assessed to be eligible for individual NRHP listing, but the Moravia one seems not ever to have been separately NRHP-listed.

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. R. Anne Safley (August 1992). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Church Street–Congress Street Historic District". NARA. Retrieved November 10, 2009. Includes 26 photos from 1992.

External links

U.S. National Register of Historic Places in New York
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