St. Nicholas of Myra Church (Manhattan) explained

40.7279°N -73.9827°W

The St. Nicholas of Myra Church is an American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Diocese (ACROD) church dedicated to Saint Nicholas, located at 288 East 10th Street, on the corner of Avenue A in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, across from Tompkins Square Park.

The church was built in 1883 as the Memorial Chapel of St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, designed in Gothic Revival style by James Renwick Jr.  - who also designed Grace Church and St. Patrick's Cathedral  - and W. H. Russell.[1] The chapel was a gift of Rutherfurd Stuyvesant, a descendant of the Dutch governor Peter Stuyvesant, in memory of his wife.[2]

The church later became the Holy Trinity Slovak Lutheran Church, and then, in 1925, the ACROD rented it for use as the Church of St. Nicholas of Myra, and bought it outright in 1937. The church draws its parishioners from the tri-state area: New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. , p.174
  2. News: Chan . Sewell . Sewell Chan . Church and Midtown Building Are Landmarks . The New York Times . December 16, 2008.
  3. , p.234