place

St. Nicholas Orthodox Church and Rectory

Christian organizations established in 1901Church buildings with domesChurches completed in 1908Churches in Salem, MassachusettsChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts
Eastern Orthodox churches in MassachusettsEssex County, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubsMassachusetts church stubsNational Register of Historic Places in Salem, MassachusettsOrthodox Church in America churchesPolish-American culture in MassachusettsTourist attractions in Salem, MassachusettsUkrainian-American history
St Nicholas Orthodox Church and Rectory Salem MA
St Nicholas Orthodox Church and Rectory Salem MA

St. Nicholas Orthodox Church and Rectory is a historic church at 64-66 Forrester Street in Salem, Massachusetts. The parish now is under Diocese of New England of the Orthodox Church in America.The church was built in 1908 for a congregation of immigrants from Galicia in Eastern Europe (now part of Western Ukraine and Poland) that had been established in 1901. The wood-frame building was designed by local architect William Devereaux Dennis. Its main facade is finished with flushboard siding, while the other elevations are sheathed in clapboards. The center of main facade is dominated by a tower that is initially square, but is topped by an octagonal belfry section and an onion dome with a cross-shaped spire. The facade is flanked by small square towers topped by onion domes. Behind the church stands a Colonial Revival rectory building that was built several years after the church.The church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St. Nicholas Orthodox Church and Rectory (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St. Nicholas Orthodox Church and Rectory
Forrester Street, Salem

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: St. Nicholas Orthodox Church and RectoryContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.525555555556 ° E -70.885277777778 °
placeShow on map

Address

Forrester Street 56
01970 Salem
Massachusetts, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

St Nicholas Orthodox Church and Rectory Salem MA
St Nicholas Orthodox Church and Rectory Salem MA
Share experience

Nearby Places

Bridge Street Neck Historic District
Bridge Street Neck Historic District

The Bridge Street Neck Historic District is a predominantly residential historic district in Salem, Massachusetts. It encompasses most of a peninsula of land northeast of downtown Salem, on the route connecting Salem to Beverly, which has been the scene of residential, commercial, and industrial development since the early settlement of Salem in the 1630s. Bridge Street, the spine of the district is a thoroughfare connecting Salem to the bridge leading to Beverly. The district is roughly bounded by railroad tracks to its west, the shore of the peninsula to the east, On the north it is bounded by modern (post-1952) developments, and on the south it abuts the Salem Common Historic District. In addition to properties on Bridge Street, the district includes properties on side streets between March/Osgood Streets, and Howard/Webb Streets. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.The City of Salem has approximately 19,000 total residences, of which 6% or about 1,200 units are located in the Bridge Street Neck neighborhood. Historically, the Bridge Street Neck grew as a gateway district organized along the main road and bridge that connects Salem to the cities of Beverly and Danvers (Bridge Street/Route 1A). Land use along the road has traditionally been focused on retail and commercial services that cater to residents of Salem and the surrounding communities, and depend on automobile access. Single- and two-family homes are nestled behind commercial properties on both sides of Bridge Street, extending throughout the neck and all the way to the water. In August 2008, a new bridge and bypass road (named Sgt. James Ayube Memorial Drive in 2011) opened in order to alleviate the bottleneck traffic on Bridge Street. This bypass connects Route 1A in Beverly directly to downtown Salem along the western coast of the Bridge Street Neck neighborhood, with access road entries located only at either end. In March to August 2009, a study was completed to generate strategies for the revitalization of the Bridge Street Neck neighborhood, one of the oldest settlements in the City of Salem. The strategy's vision is aimed at maintaining the residential character and scale of the neighborhood, and attracting more business and visitors to its commercial areas. The historical character of the neighborhood shall be reflected in its well maintained buildings and streets.