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First United Methodist Church (Des Moines, Iowa)

1845 establishments in Iowa TerritoryChurches completed in 1908Churches in Des Moines, IowaChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in IowaNational Register of Historic Places in Des Moines, Iowa
Neoclassical architecture in IowaNeoclassical church buildings in the United StatesReligious organizations established in 1845United Methodist churches in Iowa
First Methodist Episcopal
First Methodist Episcopal

First United Methodist Church is located in downtown Des Moines, Iowa, United States. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1984 as First Methodist Episcopal Church, which is its original name.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article First United Methodist Church (Des Moines, Iowa) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

First United Methodist Church (Des Moines, Iowa)
Pleasant Street, Des Moines

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.58925 ° E -93.631138888889 °
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Address

First United Methodist Church

Pleasant Street 1001
50309 Des Moines
Iowa, United States
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First Methodist Episcopal
First Methodist Episcopal
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Methodist Deaconess Institute—Esther Hall
Methodist Deaconess Institute—Esther Hall

The Methodist Deaconess Institute—Esther Hall, also known as Hawthorn Hill Apartments, is a historic building located in Des Moines, Iowa, United States. This building has been known by a variety of titles. They include the Bible Training School, Women's Foreign Missionary Society; Women's Home Missionary Society-Bible Training School; Iowa National Bible Training School; Iowa National Esther Hall & Bidwell Deaconess Home; Hawthorn Hill; and Chestnut Hill. The Women's Home Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church established a Des Moines affiliate in 1896. Part of their responsibilities was to oversee the work of deaconesses of the church. At about the same time a Bible training school was established at Iowa Methodist Hospital's School of Nursing. This building was constructed in 1922 to house those programs, which trained Methodist women as social workers, missionaries, and deaconesses. It contained dormitories, lecture, science and recreation rooms, and a chapel. Its function expanded in 1925 as a residence for young career women. The Bible training program was phased out during the Great Depression. The facility became co-ed in 1974 and closed in 1976. It reopened in 1978 before housing a multi-ministry human service agency. It ceased as a residential facility in 1995. In 2008 it became a low- and moderate-income apartment building. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2009.The brick Colonial Revival structure was designed by the prominent Des Moines architectural firm of Proudfoot, Bird and Rawson, and it was built by Arthur Neumann and Sons. The 3½-story main block is flanked by two-story wings that forms an "H." A two-story addition was built onto the east wing sometime before 1941. Both the main block and the wings were built over a raised basement. The roof on the west wings is gabled on the north end and hipped on the south, while the east wing has a hip roof. The main block features gabled ends and a two-story front porch that features classical columns and a shed roof. A single-story addition from 1959 has been removed.

Marsh Engineering Company
Marsh Engineering Company

The Marsh Engineering Company was a company that designed many significant bridges in the United States, including a number that survive and are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was located at 206 Masonic Temple in Des Moines, Iowa. The firm's principal engineer was James Barney Marsh (1856–1936), an engineer and bridge designer born in North Lake, Wisconsin. Works include: Dunkerton Bridge (1909), Town street over Crane Creek, Dunkerton, Iowa (NRHP-listed) Marsh Concrete Rainbow Arch Bridge (1911), Courtland, Minnesota, is a reinforced concrete through arch bridge, built in 1911 the same year that Marsh obtained a patent for his design. (NRHP-listed) Rainbow Arch Bridge at Valley City, North Dakota, (was NRHP-listed but was later removed) Squaw Creek Bridge (1917), 120th St. and V Ave. over Squaw Creek, Ridgeport, Iowa (NRHP-listed) Mederville Bridge (1918), County road over Volga River, Mederville, Iowa (NRHP-listed) First Avenue Bridge (1920), US 151 over Cedar River, Cedar Rapids, Iowa (NRHP-listed) Rainbow Arch Bridge (1922), CO 52, Fort Morgan, Colorado (NRHP-listed) River Street Bridge (1922-24), Iowa Falls, Iowa (NRHP-listed) Cotter Bridge, constructed in 1930, is the only bridge built by Marsh Engineering Company of Des Moines, Iowa in the state of Arkansas. It brings U.S. Route 62, over the White River, and opened up a large area of the Ozarks for recreation. (NRHP-listed) Henley Street Bridge, in Knoxville, Tennessee, designed in 1930The Wilson River Bridge (1931), near Tillamook, Washington, and others like it in Washington were designed by notable architect Conde McCullough, who had been employed at Marsh Engineering Company during the 1910s.