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Kenwood Evangelical Church

1887 establishments in IllinoisChicago LandmarksChicago building and structure stubsChurches completed in 1887Churches in Chicago
Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in IllinoisCook County, Illinois Registered Historic Place stubsEvangelical churches in IllinoisIllinois religious building and structure stubsMidwestern United States church stubsProperties of religious function on the National Register of Historic Places in ChicagoRomanesque Revival church buildings in IllinoisUnited Church of Christ churches in Illinois
20080909 Kenwood Evangelical Church from west
20080909 Kenwood Evangelical Church from west

Kenwood Evangelical Church (also known as Kenwood United Church of Christ) is a historic church building at 4600-4608 South Greenwood Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. The Romanesque building was constructed in 1887 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991. The church is also a designated Chicago Landmark, as of October 5, 2011.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kenwood Evangelical Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kenwood Evangelical Church
East 46th Street, Chicago Kenwood

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Wikipedia: Kenwood Evangelical ChurchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.811388888889 ° E -87.6 °
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Address

Shakespeare Ct. Condos

East 46th Street 1029-1033
60653 Chicago, Kenwood
Illinois, United States
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20080909 Kenwood Evangelical Church from west
20080909 Kenwood Evangelical Church from west
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Kenwood Astrophysical Observatory
Kenwood Astrophysical Observatory

The Kenwood Astrophysical Observatory was the personal observatory of George Ellery Hale, constructed by his father, William E. Hale, in 1890 at the family home in the Kenwood section of Chicago. It was here that the spectroheliograph, which Hale had invented while attending MIT, was first put to practical use; and it was here that Hale established the Astrophysical Journal. Kenwood's principal instrument was a twelve-inch refractor, which was used in conjunction with a Rowland grating as part of the spectroheliograph. Hale hired Ferdinand Ellerman as an assistant; years later, the two would work together again at the Mount Wilson Observatory. Hale's work attracted the attention of many in the astronomical community, and when he was hired at the University of Chicago as a professor of astronomy, more advanced astronomy students initially used the Kenwood Observatory. When Yerkes Observatory was established in 1897, the Kenwood instruments were donated to the University of Chicago and moved to the Yerkes facility in Williams Bay, Wisconsin. The 12-inch telescope was one of the instruments besides the large 40-inch aperture refractor for the start of Yerkes observatory in the 1890s. The observatory was also called Kenwood Observatory. The 12-inch refractor is noted as being moved to the north dome of the Yerkes observatory, but was eventually replaced by a 24-inch reflector telescope.The 12 inch refractor was a double telescope with one for visual observation and another objective for astrophotography,