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Episcopal Church of the Nativity (Huntsville, Alabama)

Episcopal Church of the Nativity
Episcopal Church of the Nativity Huntsville March 2013 1.jpg
Episcopal Church of the Nativity in Huntsville.
Episcopal Church of the Nativity (Huntsville, Alabama) is located in Alabama
Episcopal Church of the Nativity (Huntsville, Alabama)
Episcopal Church of the Nativity (Huntsville, Alabama) is located in the US
Episcopal Church of the Nativity (Huntsville, Alabama)
Location 212 Eustis Avenue, Huntsville, Alabama
Coordinates 34°43′48.19″N 86°35′0.27″W / 34.7300528°N 86.5834083°W / 34.7300528; -86.5834083Coordinates: 34°43′48.19″N 86°35′0.27″W / 34.7300528°N 86.5834083°W / 34.7300528; -86.5834083
Built 1859
Architect Frank Wills; Henry Dudley
Architectural style Gothic Revival
NRHP Reference # 74000420
Significant dates
Added to NRHP October 9, 1974
Designated NHL June 21, 1990

Episcopal Church of the Nativity is a church in Huntsville, Alabama. It was built in the Gothic Revival style in 1859. It is noted as one of the most pristine examples of Ecclesiological Gothic architecture in the South. It is also one of the least-altered structures by architect Frank Wills and one of only thirteen surviving houses of worship designed by him in the United States. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1990.

The history of the present Episcopal Church of the Nativity begins in January 1856 when Henry C. Lay, the minister for the church, was in Mobile and saw the construction of Trinity Episcopal Church, designed by Frank Wills and Henry Dudley. Afterwards he chose the same firm to design the new sanctuary for his church, since the original building completed in 1847 was already inadequate for the congregation's needs. The vestry acquired two lots, adjacent to the original church, at the corner of Eustis Avenue and Green Street for $3,923 later in 1856.

A building committee worked over the three years to raise the necessary funds for construction by subscription, while construction progressed. They had hired a local builder, Hugh N. Moore, to construct the building. Because Moore was not familiar with certain techniques of construction for Gothic architecture, Lay wrote to Wills early in 1857 to request assistance and a Mr. Mason was sent to Huntsville to supervise the construction. Wills died in April of that year and his partner, Dudley, took over. Construction continued and by December 1858 the windows had been installed. The congregation held the first services in the building on the eve of Easter, 23 April 1859. The building was estimated to have had a total cost of roughly $37,565.


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