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David Farragut School (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)

Italianate architecture in PennsylvaniaSchool buildings completed in 1873School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in PhiladelphiaUpper North Philadelphia
Farragut School Philly
Farragut School Philly

David Farragut School is a historic school building located in the West Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was built in 1873 and is a three-story, four bay, stone building in the Italianate-style. An addition was built in 1915. It features brownstone and limestone trim. It was named for Admiral David Farragut (1801–1870). It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article David Farragut School (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

David Farragut School (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
West Cumberland Street, Philadelphia

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N 39.988 ° E -75.1348 °
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Address

West Cumberland Street 192
19133 Philadelphia
Pennsylvania, United States
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Farragut School Philly
Farragut School Philly
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St. Luke's Church, Kensington

St. Luke's Church, Kensington, was an Episcopal congregation in Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The parish was founded in 1904 as an outgrowth of the Episcopal Hospital Mission. The church – located at the northwest corner of East Huntingdon and B Streets at Kensington Avenue – was designed by Allen Evans of Furness & Evans, and completed in 1904. Its parish house, just north of the church, was designed by Furness & Evans, and completed in 1905. Description: "The new [parish house] building will cost $35,000, and is to be a two-story building constructed of Holmesburg granite. The first floor will be used for classes—the Sunday School numbers 1,500,—the second floor for the chapel and library, and a gymnasium will be located in the basement." The parish closed in 1987. St Luke's Church, Kensington, is an among the few surviving reminders of the mid to late 19th century English immigrant experience and community in Kensington and Philadelphia. Movement has been made to celebrate the colonial experience (i.e. Penn Treaty Park) and preserve the 19th century "new immigrant" experience (i.e. St. Laurentius Church, in Fishtown) in the greater Kensington area. Scholars often refer to this immigrant group as hidden and forgotten.[1] These immigrants, to outsiders, blended in and disappeared. However, as the property demonstrates, mid to late 19th century English immigrants, far from being hidden, built unique neighborhoods, cultural institutions, and worship sites.