About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 32. Chapters: Union Chapel, Brighton, Medway, St Mary-le-Bow, Fairbanks House, Basilica of Our Lady of Zapopan, Philipse Manor Hall State Historic Site, Wanton-Lyman-Hazard House, Ostrogski Palace, Thomas Lyon House, Saxon Palace, Paul Revere House, Krom i Archbishop's Palace, Voorlezer's House, Buckman Tavern, Farmar Mill, Lilford Hall, Belmont Hall, Eleazer Arnold House, John Balch House, Brook Street Chapel, Knutsford, Sagtikos Manor, Museum Willet-Holthuysen, Swett-Ilsley House, Teatro Malibran, Rebecca Nurse Homestead, Ziwa, Peleg Arnold Tavern, Merchant Venturers Almshouses, Terry-Ketcham Inn, Earl's Palace, Kirkwall, John Hale House, Fort Garrison, Ocean Hall, Coffin House, Daggett House, Poillon-Seguine-Britton House, Haviland-Davison Grist Mill, Deacon John Graves House, Adam Keeling House, First Shearith Israel Graveyard, Richard Sparrow House, Joseph Cooper House, Acadian House, Joseph Whitman House, Criss Cross, Palmer-Northrup House, Timothy Knapp House and Milton Cemetery, Thomas Fenner House, San Fedele, Peak House, Isaac Goodale House, John Bliss House, Hoxie House, Barrett-Byam Homestead, Gorton-Greene House, Valentine Whitman House, Church of St. Nicholas in Tropino. Excerpt: The Union Chapel, also known as the Union Street Chapel, Elim Free Church, Four Square Gospel Tabernacle or Elim Tabernacle of the Four Square Gospel, is a former chapel in the centre of Brighton, a constituent part of the city of Brighton and Hove, England. After three centuries of religious use by various congregations, the chapel-which had been Brighton's first Nonconformist place of worship-passed into secular use in 1988 when it was converted into a public house. It was redesigned in 1825, at the height of Brighton's Georgian building boom, by at least one of the members of the Wilds-Busby architectural partnership, Brighton's pre-em...