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Buildings
& Windows
The
land now occupied by Trinity Church was donated in 1882 through
A. A. Low, a New York associate of Collis P. Huntington, then president
of the C & 0 Railroad. Mr. Low's family also raised a substantial
part of the money needed to build the church. 
When
the congregation felt it could assume responsibility for the balance,
the church was built and occupied in 1884. For many years after
that the vestry minutes reflect the struggle the congregation had
as it eventually liquidated the debt on the church building. Dealing
with debt was a concern of many Trinity vestries over the years
as the church building was expanded, a parish house was built, the
parking lot acquired and other improvements added.
The
present parish house was built in 1924 on the site formerly occupied
by the rectory. It cost over $100,000, which must have been a daunting
sum at the time. The chairperson of the Building Committee was John
W. Ensign, son of Ely Ensign, who had been chairperson of the Building
Committee for the church back in 1883.
The
parish house has over 30 rooms, virtually all of which have been
renovated as have the heating, air conditioning and kitchen facilities
of the parish house. The parish house has more than adequate space
for the present needs of the congregation and substantial space
for expansion purposes. A major expansion of the church nave and
the parish house was undertaken in 1962 and the renovated buildings
were ready to be used on Easter Day 1963. The Bethlehem Chapel is
located on the ground floor of the parish house and is used for
small weddings, funerals,
and other occasions. The Chapel was beautifully renovated in 1987
and in 2003 following a small fire.
The
Church itself is cruciform in shape and has been described as "English
Chapel" in design, exterior being finished in brick with stone
trim. The buttresses, which support the high-pitched slate roof,
lend a Gothic air to the interior.
A
cloister connects the parish house and church with Willet stained-glass
windows depicting the seven sacraments. With a single exception,
all of the windows in the church itself are either Willet or Tiffany
stained-glass windows. The organ, which was installed several years
ago, is estimated to have a replacement cost of $250,000. Five hundred
persons can be seated comfortably in the church. The church is carpeted
and has a sound system with wireless microphones.
At
the time the church was renovated in the early 1960s, an outdoor
walled garden was constructed where the congregation gathers after
church services in the summer months for tea and lemonade. A stone
altar is set in the east wall, which permits small outdoor services
on appropriate occasions. The columbarium was added in 1989 and
expanded in 2003.
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