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St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church (Kingston, Ontario)

1822 establishments in Canada19th-century Presbyterian church buildings in CanadaChurches in Kingston, OntarioDesignated heritage properties in OntarioPresbyterian churches in Ontario
Exteiror of St. Andrews Church in Kingston, Ontario in 2007
Exteiror of St. Andrews Church in Kingston, Ontario in 2007

St. Andrew's Church is a Presbyterian Church in Kingston, Ontario. The church opened for service in 1822. St. Andrew's was the centre of Presbyterianism in Upper Canada, and the church was instrumental in the establishment of Queen's College, later to become Queen's University.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church (Kingston, Ontario) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church (Kingston, Ontario)
Princess Street, Kingston

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Wikipedia: St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church (Kingston, Ontario)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 44.232787 ° E -76.489571 °
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Address

Princess Street 339
K7L 1B6 Kingston
Ontario, Canada
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Exteiror of St. Andrews Church in Kingston, Ontario in 2007
Exteiror of St. Andrews Church in Kingston, Ontario in 2007
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Nearby Places

Inner Harbour, Kingston
Inner Harbour, Kingston

Inner Harbour is a neighbourhood located in downtown Kingston, Ontario, Canada. The Inner Harbour district is bounded by Joseph Street to the north, Princess Street to the south, Division Street on the west and the Cataraqui River on the east. The area is within the King's Town District. The District is represented on Kingston City Council by Councillor Rob Hutchison for the 2010-14 term of office. The average family income for the area is $45,715 which is lower than the city average. The Inner Harbour area consists primarily of working-class families with commercial activity focused primarily along Princess and Queen Streets on the south side of the neighbourhood. In the past the demographics of the Inner Harbour in addition to other north Kingston neighbourhoods contributed to local negativity toward living "north of Princess". The term refers to areas located on the north side of Princess Street, which is the main east–west thoroughfare through Kingston, and runs the length of the city as it is Highway 2 through town. In recent years the socio-demographic nature of this area has changed as increasing levels of gentrification and some studentification (the social and environmental changes caused by increasing numbers of post-secondary students living in a particular urban area) has taken place in some of these neighbourhoods. The areas proximity to downtown Kingston means it has many good examples of 19th century heritage buildings constructed of local limestone. It is also home to Leon's Centre, a large venue entertainment and sporting arena. The La Salle Causeway which enters the Inner Harbour neighbourhood at the foot of Ontario Street is also the main link between Kingston and its eastern suburbs. It consists of three bridges, one of which is a lift bridge allowing boats access to the Cataraqui River, Inner Harbour and Rideau Canal system linking Kingston with Ottawa.