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Winchester Law School

1823 establishments in Virginia1831 disestablishments in the United StatesDefunct law schoolsEducation in Frederick County, VirginiaIndependent law schools in the United States
Law schools in Virginia
Henry St. George Tucker (1780–1848) (portrait)
Henry St. George Tucker (1780–1848) (portrait)

Winchester Law School was a privately run institution for legal education in Winchester, Virginia. Operated by Chancellor Henry St. George Tucker Sr., it operated from 1824 to 1831. Tucker closed it after being elected to the state Court of Appeals, because he had to move to Richmond, the capital.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Winchester Law School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Winchester Law School
South Cameron Street, Winchester

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Wikipedia: Winchester Law SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.182944444444 ° E -78.164694444444 °
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Address

South Cameron Street 37
22601 Winchester
Virginia, United States
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Henry St. George Tucker (1780–1848) (portrait)
Henry St. George Tucker (1780–1848) (portrait)
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Nearby Places

Christ Episcopal Church (Winchester, Virginia)
Christ Episcopal Church (Winchester, Virginia)

Christ Church, or Christ Episcopal Church, is an Anglican church in Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia. The church was founded in 1738, with its first vestry elected in 1742. It is the seat of Frederick Parish, Diocese of Virginia, which once covered half of the Shenandoah valley and western Virginia, including what became West Virginia. The current church building, the parish's third, was designed by Robert Mills (who also designed the Washington Monument and Monumental Church in Richmond, Virginia) - it was completed in 1828, and is the oldest church building continuously used for religious purposes in the county. It is a contributing building in the local Historic District which predates the National Register of Historic Places, and which has been expanded three times since 1980.The early organizational history of Christ Church differs significantly from that of the Episcopal Church in Frederick, Maryland, the nearby and similar gateway parish during colonial era settlement in Maryland, although the two churches had similar experiences of expansion and during the American Civil War, and remain prominent both architecturally and socially in their historic towns. Christ Church is now one of five Anglican churches in the historic Virginia gateway city. The other churches are: historic St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal (founded in 1867, one of the first AME churches and also a contributing building to the historic district), St. Paul's on the Hill (which began as a mission of this church at the city's outskirts in 1966 and became an independent parish in 1996), St. Michael Anglican Church (founded by a British movement and using the 1928 Book of Common Prayer) and Winchester Anglican Church (founded as a mission of the Anglican Church in North America circa 2010) .