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Belmont Methodist-Episcopal Church

1921 establishments in Virginia20th-century Methodist church buildings in the United StatesChurches completed in 1921Churches in Roanoke, VirginiaChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
Gothic Revival church buildings in VirginiaMethodist churches in VirginiaMetropolitan Community ChurchesNational Register of Historic Places in Roanoke, VirginiaShenandoah Valley, Virginia Registered Historic Place stubsVirginia church stubs
BELMONT METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, ROANOKE CITY
BELMONT METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, ROANOKE CITY

Belmont Methodist-Episcopal Church is a historic church building, located in the Belmont neighborhood of Roanoke, Virginia. It was built as a Methodist Episcopal church between 1917 and 1921, and is a three-story, brick, late Gothic Revival-style church. It features a tall bell tower, complex roof form, steeply-pitched gables and parapets, large pointed arch windows, crenellated corner towers, buttresses, cast-concrete quatrefoils, and other detailing. Capacity within sight and hearing of the pulpit is 1,000, as the original auditorium (seats 440) was enlarged with an adjoining parlor (75), an adult assembly room (260), and a gallery (225).In a notice from 1917, H. L. Cain is named the architect of the church building, and the cost of the building was initially budgeted at $50,000.00.The building was sold in 2003 to the Metropolitan Community Church of the Blue Ridge, who used it as their sanctuary; that church has since vacated the building. The church was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 2011. Since 2019, it has also been a contributing structure to the NRHP-listed Belmont Historic District.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Belmont Methodist-Episcopal Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Belmont Methodist-Episcopal Church
Jamison Avenue Southeast, Roanoke Morningside

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Wikipedia: Belmont Methodist-Episcopal ChurchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.268888888889 ° E -79.929722222222 °
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Address

Jamison Avenue Southeast 835
24013 Roanoke, Morningside
Virginia, United States
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BELMONT METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, ROANOKE CITY
BELMONT METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, ROANOKE CITY
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Nearby Places

Roanoke City Market Historic District
Roanoke City Market Historic District

Roanoke City Market Historic District, also known as City Market District, is a national historic district located in the Downtown Roanoke area of Roanoke, Virginia. The district's history dates to 1882, when the Norfok and Western Railway (N&W) began the process of locating its headquarters to the small town of Big Lick. That decision precipitated a name change for the town to Roanoke, as well as a migration of the town's business district southeast towards the new railroad depot and hotel being built by the N&W. A town square along Campbell Avenue began seeing use as a makeshift open-air market, and in 1884 the new City of Roanoke's original charter provided for the construction of a municipal market. Completed in 1886, the original market building occupied the northwestern portion of the square; when that building was destroyed by fire it was replaced in 1922 with the current building and its centered arrangement.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983, with an area roughly bounded by Williamson Rd., Norfolk Ave., S. Jefferson St., and Church Ave. The district area was increased to include 302 Campbell Ave., SE, and 9 Church Ave, SE, in 2002. The district encompasses 51 contributing buildings and 1 contributing object. The focal point of the area's grid-plan is the City Market Building (1922) set in the middle of the central Market Square. Other notable buildings include the Hartsook Building (1897), Lampros Building (1909), the McGuire Building (1914), and the Goria Brothers Grocery Building (1924). Located in the district is the separately listed Fire Station No. 1.