St. Paulus Evangelisch Lutherischen Gemeinde Explained

St. Paulus Evangelisch Lutherischen Gemeinde
Location:South of Jonesboro off Illinois Route 127
Coordinates:37.4156°N -89.2753°W
Nearest City:Jonesboro, Illinois
Built:1860
Architect:Fettinger, Charles Theodore
Added:November 24, 1980
Refnum:80001413

St. Paulus Evangelisch Lutherischen Gemeinde (also called Kornthal Church or Kornthal Union County Memorial Church) is a historic Lutheran church in Jonesboro, Illinois. The church was built by immigrants from Austria, who settled in the Jonesboro area in 1852. Architect Charles Fettinger, one of the settlers, designed the church. The wood-frame church features a limestone foundation, upper-story windows topped by lunettes, and a double entrance topped by an arched transom. The interior of the church features an intricately carved wooden altar and pulpit, also designed by Fettinger. Construction on the church was completed in 1860, and the building was dedicated in 1861. The church's bell tower, which is topped by a spire, was added in 1889. The Queen Anne style parsonage was constructed in the 1900s. Services at the church ended in 1949, and the church became the property of the Kornthal Congregation and Historical Society. It was refurbished in 1963 with the aid of the State of Illinois. The church is one of the only remnants of southern Illinois' German-speaking population.[1]

The church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Seibert. Susan M.. National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: St. Paulus Evangelisch Lutherischen Gemeinde. https://web.archive.org/web/20131112040134/http://gis.hpa.state.il.us/pdfs/200311.pdf. dead. November 12, 2013. National Park Service. November 11, 2013. August 15, 1980.