Contributed by St. John's Episcopal Church through Bangor Public Library
Description
St. John's Episcopal Church was built in 1835-36, consecrated in 1839, and was designed by Richard Upjohn, who would go on to design Trinity Church in New York City and St. Paul's Cathedral in Buffalo. St. John's was the first church he designed, the first Gothic Revival style church in Bangor, and is perhaps the finest example of a Gothic Revivial church in Maine.
This photograph shows the interior, with fine ribbed vaults and raised galleries, and the chancel, added in an expansion in 1863, decorated for Christmas. The large window was contracted with the Tiffany Company and shows decorative designs and Christian symbols, including the lamb and cross of St. John. The original building was wooden, and the window burned along with the church in the 1911 fire.
About This Item
- Title: View of the St. John's Tiffany Window, Bangor, ca. 1906
- Creation Date: circa 1906
- Subject Date: circa 1906
- Location: Bangor, Penobscot County, ME
- Media: Photographic print
- Dimensions: 24 cm x 19 cm
- Object Type: Image
Cross Reference Searches
Standardized Subject Headings
- Stained glass windows--Maine--Bangor
- Architectural elements
- Stained glass--Maine--Bangor
- Churches--Maine--Bangor
- Interiors
- Tiffany Glass & Decorating Company
- Windows--Maine--Bangor
- Episcopal churches--Maine--Bangor
Other Keywords
For more information about this item, contact:
Bangor Public Library145 Harlow Street, Bangor, ME 04401
(207) 947-8336
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