Mission Chapel Explained

Mission Chapel
Coordinates:42.2633°N -71.7956°W
Built:1854
Architect:Ichabod Washburn
Architecture:Italianate
Added:March 5, 1980
Mpsub:Worcester MRA
Refnum:80000616

The Mission Chapel is an historic church in Worcester, Massachusetts. A rare example of the early Victorian Norman (or "Romanesque in panel") styling, it was built by Ichabod Washburn in 1854, and is one of the city's oldest church buildings. The exterior side walls are divided into bays separated by piers which rise to a layer of corbelling, with a second layer of corbelling just below the eave. The main facade is divided into three bays, with arched windows in the gable. The Evangelical City Missionary Society, for whom the chapel was built, was established by a group of local Protestant congregations as a missionary site for serving the city's poor and needy. The building was rented out for commercial purposes during the mid-20th century, but has otherwise been used for religious and missionary purposes.[1]

The chapel was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NRHP nomination for Mission Chapel. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 2014-02-15.