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Union Church (Kipton, Ohio)

Churches completed in 1879Churches in Lorain County, OhioChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in OhioGothic Revival church buildings in OhioNational Register of Historic Places in Lorain County, Ohio
Northeastern Ohio Registered Historic Place stubsOhio church stubs
Union Church Kipton OH
Union Church Kipton OH

Union Church (Kipton Community Church) is a historic church at 511 Church Street in Kipton, Ohio. It was built in 1879 and added to the National Register in 1982.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Union Church (Kipton, Ohio) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Union Church (Kipton, Ohio)
Church Street,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.265555555556 ° E -82.304166666667 °
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Address

Church Street 513
44049
Ohio, United States
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Union Church Kipton OH
Union Church Kipton OH
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Oberlin station
Oberlin station

Oberlin is a historic former train station in the city of Oberlin, Ohio, United States. Constructed shortly after the American Civil War, it has become an example of adaptive reuse, and it has been named a historic site. The depot is a simple weatherboarded structure with a foundation of sandstone, designed in a mixture of the Gothic Revival and Italianate styles of architecture. It exemplifies train stations constructed during the middle of the 19th century: northern Ohio's earliest stations were often built in a form of Gothic Revival, while Italianate styling became much more popular following the conclusion of the Civil War in 1865. Few depots with this mix of styles survive, especially in Lorain County.Oberlin's first railroad was built by the Toledo, Norwalk, and Cleveland Railroad, which opened its line through the village in late 1852. Fifteen years later, the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad erected the present structure along its east-west line on Oberlin's southern side. From its earliest years, the rail line was a highly significant component of village life: Oberlin College students and other travellers had previously relied on weather-dependent Lake Erie transportation routes, so the all-weather railroad line provided an immense boost to the college and to the community in general. In 1914, the LS&MS became a part of the new New York Central Railroad, but the new larger railroad only operated the depot for a few decades; by the 1970s, the depot sat silent and unused. Rather than demolishing the depot, locals chose to preserve it: the land surrounding it was converted into a park, and the depot itself was renovated in order to ready it for use as the local Head Start offices.In 1979, the depot was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Oberlin Lake Shore And Michigan Southern Station, qualifying both because of its architecture and its place in local history. Some changes were made when the depot was renovated for Head Start, but it retains its original appearance, aside from the absence of the rails that once sat next to it. As one of the area's least-changed historic railroad stations, it was deemed an important example of railroads' changing architectural styles during the mid-19th century. It is one of twelve National Register-listed locations in and around Oberlin, and one of more than a hundred countywide.