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Christ Episcopal Church (Waltham, Massachusetts)

Churches in Waltham, MassachusettsChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in MassachusettsEpiscopal church buildings in MassachusettsNational Register of Historic Places in Waltham, MassachusettsPeabody and Stearns buildings
Christ Episcopal Church, Waltham, July 2023
Christ Episcopal Church, Waltham, July 2023

Christ Church is a historic Episcopal church at 750 Main Street in Waltham, Massachusetts. The church is a parish of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts, and was named to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. The church was founded in 1848, but a local hall was used for services until a wooden church was built in 1849. The wooden structure eventually proved inadequate and a larger church designed by Peabody and Stearns was built of local fieldstone at the current location between 1897 and 1898. The church contains stained glass windows produced by several noteworthy manufacturers, including Clayton and Bell, Charles Connick, Louis Comfort Tiffany, and Donald MacDonald. Eight rectors have served the church since its founding.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Christ Episcopal Church (Waltham, Massachusetts) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Christ Episcopal Church (Waltham, Massachusetts)
Main Street, Waltham

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.375555555556 ° E -71.240833333333 °
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Address

Main Street 760
02454 Waltham
Massachusetts, United States
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Christ Episcopal Church, Waltham, July 2023
Christ Episcopal Church, Waltham, July 2023
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Nearby Places

Central Square Historic District (Waltham, Massachusetts)
Central Square Historic District (Waltham, Massachusetts)

The Central Square Historic District is a historic district encompassing the central town common of the city of Waltham, Massachusetts, and several commercial buildings facing the common or in its immediate vicinity. The common is bounded by Carter, Moody, Main, and Elm Streets; the district includes fourteen buildings, which are located on Main, Elm, Lexington, and Church Streets, on the north and east side of the common. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.Although Waltham was settled in the 17th century and incorporated as a town in 1738, it had no recognizable town center until the 1830s, when the nearby Boston Manufacturing Company gave the town the land that now serves as its central square. The area was further enhanced as a central location by the arrival of the railroad, and the construction of the Moody Street bridge across the Charles River, both in the 1840s. Waltham was incorporated as a city in 1884. Its City Hall, a 1924–26 Georgian Revival building designed by William Rogers Greely, stands on the common at the corner of Main and Elm Streets. The oldest municipal building in the district is the 1887 fire station at 25 Lexington Street; it is a brick Queen Anne structure designed by local architect Samuel Patch. It stands next to the 1890 police station building, designed by Hartwell & Richardson. A row of commercial buildings stand across Main Street, facing the common. Many of these were designed by architect Henry W. Hartwell, as was the Music Hall building at 15 Elm Street. Most of these buildings were built between 1880 and 1920.