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St David's Uniting Church

1860 establishments in AustraliaChurches completed in 1900Churches listed on the New South Wales State Heritage RegisterFormer Presbyterian churches in New South WalesGothic Revival architecture in Sydney
Gothic Revival church buildings in AustraliaHaberfield, New South WalesSandstone churches in AustraliaUniting churches in SydneyUse Australian English from May 2018Victorian architecture in Sydney
StDavids UnitingChurch Haberfield
StDavids UnitingChurch Haberfield

St David's Uniting Church is a heritage-listed Uniting church and associated precinct at 51- 53 Dalhousie Street, Haberfield, Inner West Council, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It was designed by Simeon Lord, David Ramsay, William Munro, J. A. B. Campbell, Power, Adam, and Munning, Thomas Rowe, and Ferdinand Reuss and built from 1860 to 1900 by Williams, Ravers, Duffy and Cannon. It is also known as St. David's Uniting Church, St Davids Presbyterian Church Precinct and includes the St David's Sunday School/Yasmar School, Ramsay Vault and Ramsay Graveyard. The property is owned by the Uniting Church in Australia. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 19 August 2003.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St David's Uniting Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St David's Uniting Church
Dalhousie Street, Sydney Haberfield

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Wikipedia: St David's Uniting ChurchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -33.8825 ° E 151.1377 °
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Address

Dalhousie Street
2045 Sydney, Haberfield
New South Wales, Australia
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StDavids UnitingChurch Haberfield
StDavids UnitingChurch Haberfield
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St John's, Ashfield
St John's, Ashfield

St John the Baptist Anglican Church is an active Anglican church located between Alt and Bland Streets, Ashfield, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Founded in 1840, on land donated by Elizabeth Underwood, the church building is the oldest authenticated surviving building in Ashfield, having been built at the time when subdivision increased the population density sufficiently to turn Ashfield into a town. It was also the first church built along the Parramatta Road which linked the early colonial towns of Sydney and Parramatta. The earliest remaining parts of the building are one of the first Sydney designs by the colonial architect Edmund Blacket, who later became renowned for his ecclesiastical architecture.: p. 51 The expansive church grounds contain a cemetery dating back to 1845 that contains the remains of many notable Ashfield residents. Australia's only memorial to Australian Air Force Cadets occupies a prominent position near the entrance to the church. The St John's site has been listed on the Local Environment Plan Heritage Schedule, and the Register of the National Trust of Australia.St John's is one of three churches, along with St Albans, Five Dock, and St Oswald's, Haberfield, which make up Christ Church Inner West, operating within the parish of Ashfield, Five Dock, and Haberfield, as part of the South Sydney Region of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney. The church has had 18 rectors, including William George Hilliard who later became the Bishop of Nelson. Andrew Katay has been rector since early 2005.