The Episcopal Church Annual 2023

The Episcopal Church Annual 2023

Author:

Publisher: Church Publishing, Inc.

Published: 2023-07-18

Total Pages: 624

ISBN-13: 1640656383

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The leading source of information on the Episcopal Church With origins dating back to 1830, The Episcopal Church Annual - aka "The Red Book" - is an indispensable reference tool, trusted year-after-year by churches, diocesan offices, libraries, and many others. You will find the following between the covers of the 2023 edition of "The Red Book", and more: - A comprehensive directory of provinces, dioceses, and churches, including contact information and listings of active clergy - The canonical structure and organization of the Episcopal Church, including complete directories for the Office of The General Convention, The House of Bishops, The House of Deputies, standing committees and commissions, and more - Listings and contact information for seminaries; Episcopal schools; centers for camps, conferences, and retreats; Episcopal Church Women; and more - Up-to-date church-wide statistical data and chronological tables - A classified buyer's guide of vendors and organizations offering valued services to the church


Essex on Lake Champlain

Essex on Lake Champlain

Author: David C. Hislop

Publisher: Arcadia Publishing

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 132

ISBN-13: 9780738563695

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Essex is located on the shoreline of Lake Champlain near the foothills of the Adirondack Mountains. The town was important for its role in lake commerce, shipping goods down the Champlain Canal to the burgeoning markets of New York City and via the Erie Canal to Rochester, Buffalo, and points west during America's golden age of expansion. The photographic record of Essex contains the mansions of the merchants and the houses of the workers who all lived together in this prototypical American community. The town contains a remarkable collection of Greek Revival buildings from 1820 to 1860, its period of national significance, that are still intact. Today Essex exists with the majority of its historic structures standing and little fringe development, and the edges of the hamlet continue to merge seamlessly into the agricultural countryside.