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St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church (Baltimore, Maryland)

St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church
St Pauls Baltimore.JPG
Old St. Paul's Church, March 2012
St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Baltimore, Maryland) is located in Baltimore
St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Baltimore, Maryland)
St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Baltimore, Maryland) is located in Maryland
St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Baltimore, Maryland)
St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Baltimore, Maryland) is located in the US
St. Paul's Episcopal Church (Baltimore, Maryland)
Location 233 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Maryland
Coordinates 39°17′31″N 76°36′54″W / 39.29194°N 76.61500°W / 39.29194; -76.61500Coordinates: 39°17′31″N 76°36′54″W / 39.29194°N 76.61500°W / 39.29194; -76.61500
Area 0.4 acres (0.16 ha)
Built 1854 (1854)
Architect Upjohn, Richard
Architectural style Basilica style
NRHP Reference # 73002198
Added to NRHP March 30, 1973

St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church, more commonly called Old St. Paul's Church today, is a historic Episcopal church located at 233 North Charles Street at the southeast corner with East Saratoga Street, in Baltimore, Maryland, (United States) near "Cathedral Hill" on the northern edge of the downtown central business district to the south and the Mount Vernon-Belevedere cultural/historic neighborhood to the north. It was founded in 1692 as the parish church for the "Patapsco Parish", one of the "original 30 parishes" of the old Church of England in colonial Maryland (now part of the Episcopal Church, U.S.A. and the Anglican Communion).

St. Paul's was founded in 1692 under the Establishment Act, by the General Assembly of Maryland under Lionel Copley, then the colonial/provincial Governor of Maryland, in the Province of Maryland under the Lord Proprietorship of the Lords Baltimore, which created 30 "Protestant" (Anglican) parishes in the colony of Maryland. The first church as "Patapsco Parish" was located somewhere along near the head of Colgate Creek, on the north shore of the Patapsco River and "Patapsco Neck" peninsula which juts into the Chesapeake Bay at North Point and Sparrows Point between the Patapsco River to the south and Back River (Maryland) to the north. Modern-day Highlandtown and Canton in southeastern Baltimore City and Dundalk, Edgemere, and Fort Howard are in suburban communities in southeastern Baltimore County there now. When Baltimore Town was founded in its present location in 1729/1730, the parish moved to "Lot 19," in the Original Survey" of 1730 at the highest point just inside the original town boundaries on the north end which were purchased from Charles Carroll of Annapolis, (1702-1782), (father of nationally-famous Charles Carroll of Carrollton, (1732-1832), later longest living signer of Declaration of Independence, only Roman Catholic to do so, and wealthiest man in America). Here a small brick church, (facing south towards the harbor), a rectory and some cemetery plots were placed in 1739 on a cliff overlooking the Jones Falls stream (which divided the town from adjacent Jonestown to the east and Fells Point to the southeast waterfront) and northwest of the original Courthouse Square (later became Battle Monument Square after its construction, 1815-1822) at North Calvert between East Lexington and Fayette Streets. The present "Old Saint Paul's Church (as it is generally known throughout the state) is located now on a portion of that property, in the northwest corner of the original platted lot of 1730.


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