I’m not Presbyterian, but I’ve spent a goodly amount of time at the Corydon Presbyterian Church. That’s because they’re always up to something! They have: a bang-up Mardi Gras meal; used to have a coffee-house once a month, with entertainment, coffee, and home-made desserts; a Christmas gift bazaar in November; informational seminars on social topics — the list goes on and on.
Much as I like them, and much as I like their “new” building, which you can see if you follow this link to the Corydon Presbyterian Church website, my pictures today are of their old building on the square.
Organized under Louisville Presbytery, Synod of Kentucky, January 1819 by Rev. John Finley Crowe, who later founded Hanover College. Early Church services were held in homes and in State Capitol prior to building first church 1826. Original church stood on South Capitol Ave. where present E.U.B. Church stands. This original church used as a Confederate Hospital following the Battle of Corydon, July 9, 1863. Congregation moved to new location and present church erected 1906. Oldest continuous church organization in Corydon.
I did pictures of the F.U.B. Church another time. Yeah, there’s a typo on the marker. “Present church” is also incorrect now, since the actual present church is on out the road a piece.
But here’s the church that’s the present church, as far as the marker knows.
After they moved out, the Presbyterians let other denominations hold services there while those folks were raising money to build their own churches, ’cause that’s how our Presbyterians roll. They eventually sold the building to some civic or municipal organization. The door was locked, so I couldn’t go inside to snap the windows and door with the sunlight coming through. Alas.
This has been a part of Norm Frampton’s Thursday Doors link-up. Go to Norm’s page, look at his gorgeous photos, click on the blue frog button, and see who else in the world is sharing doors.
A WRITING PROMPT FOR YOU: Write about someone who moves often.
MA
Dan Antion
March 30, 2017 at 8:03amLove the door and the stone arches at the doors, windows and especially in the bell tower!
Marian Allen
March 30, 2017 at 10:17amDan, I don’t know why your comments are going to moderation. I don’t know why I can’t whitelist you. I’ve gone into my spam filter and manually added you to the whitelist, and you fall out. This started all of a sudden. ~scratching my head~ ANYWAY, I’m glad you like the arches, too. 🙂
norm 2.0
March 30, 2017 at 11:30amA lovely stone building and that white door with the arch is a perfect fit 🙂
Marian Allen
April 1, 2017 at 8:44amYes, it’s a beautiful little building. 🙂
Dan Antion
March 30, 2017 at 12:08pm@Marian Allen – I was attacked by the guard dogs on your site a couple of weeks ago. They made me login again, even though it said “you are commenting as Dan…” and for almost two weeks, I was unable to add my Twitter name 🙁
That also resulted in me getting two emails from you each day, but they come about 6-8 hours apart.
Sometimes, like when I’m traveling and catching up after the fact, I respond to the “newer” email. I have done that recently. Maybe it thinks I’m “evil Dan” when I do that.
Everything else went back to normal about a week ago as far as my viewing and commenting on your posts.
Marian Allen
April 1, 2017 at 8:46amI WILL get you whitelisted again. You’re following all the rules, and I have you on my whitelist, but you still get stuck in moderation. ~scratching my head~
Joey
March 30, 2017 at 12:20pmThat IS a nice one 🙂
Marian Allen
April 1, 2017 at 8:47amThanks, Joey. 🙂
Deborah
March 30, 2017 at 11:01pmThe stone work, arched windows, with white trim and great bell tower make this church building a winner! Oh yeah, the door has a lovely transom window too. 🙂
Marian Allen
April 1, 2017 at 8:49amIt makes me happy, just to look at it. 🙂
Gordon
April 3, 2017 at 2:02amLooks like a perfectly good building & door to me; wonder why they sold it (must have been worth a fortune?).
Marian Allen
April 3, 2017 at 8:05amThey’re very active giving back to the community, Gordon. I expect the upkeep and taxes on the building outweighed any income from renting, and they probably donated the space more than they rented it. They moved to their new location long before they sold this one — they needed more room for congregation and community events, and they wanted a building that was handicap accessible.