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St. John's Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square

St. John's Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square is a historic Episcopal church located at Sixteenth Street and H Street NW, in Washington, D.C., along Black Lives Matter Plaza. The Greek Revival building, designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, is adjacent to Lafayette Square, one block from the White House. It is often called the "Church of the Presidents".

St. John's Episcopal Church
Location1525 H Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., U.S.
Coordinates38°54′1.41″N 77°2′9.91″W / 38.9003917°N 77.0360861°W / 38.9003917; -77.0360861
Built1815–1816
Part ofLafayette Square Historic District (ID70000833)
NRHP reference No.66000868[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966
Designated NHLDecember 19, 1960
Designated NHLDCPAugust 29, 1970

Every sitting president has attended the church at least once since it was built in 1816, starting with James Madison.[2] With the exception of Richard Nixon, every president since Franklin D. Roosevelt has attended spiritual services on Inauguration Day, many at St. John's.[3] It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960.[1]

History edit

Organized as a parish in 1815, it was named for Saint John the Evangelist. The building opened and the first service was held at St. John's Church on October 27, 1816. The Rev. William Dickinson Hawley served as its rector from 1817 to 1845, also serving as Chaplain of the Senate.[4]

Inception and construction edit

Two years after Maryland had ceded to the United States the territory constituting the present District of Columbia, the legislature of that state, appreciating the necessity of providing for the spiritual needs of the Protestant Episcopal inhabitants who were to reside there, and on their petition, passed the act of 26 December 1794, creating a new parish, to be known as Washington Parish-to be composed of so much of the Rock Creek Parish, in Montgomery County, Maryland, as St. John's Parish, in Prince George's County, Maryland, as was within the boundaries of the new city of Washington. In the next year a vestry was elected by the Episcopalians of the eastern end of the new parish, and the Rev. Mr. Ralph was appointed rector of the charge then organized, and took his seat in the Maryland Convention of 1795. This congregation occupied a small building on D Street and New Jersey Avenue, in the southeastern part of Washington, which since 1780, had been used as a chapel of ease connected with St. John Parish in Prince George's County. In 1806 a vestry was elected from the people worshipping at this chapel, and, in 1807, a new church was established in that vicinity, which was named Christ Church.

In Georgetown, in 1796, the Protestant Episcopal inhabitants had inaugurated a movement resulting in the establishment of a church within the new parish, which was consecrated in 1809-so that, when the general government was removed from Philadelphia, in 1800, the newcomers found three places of worship for Episcopalians within the district, two previously mentioned and the third being St. Paul's Church in Rock Creek Parish; but all too far removed from the central and more populated portion of Washington to be practically useful in those days of almost impassable roads. To supply this great need the residents in what was known as the First and Second Wards of Washington-lying between Georgetown and Sixth Street-in the year 1814 took decided measures to procure the erection of a church in the part of the city referred to. The persons who seem to have been most actively engaged in this work were Thomas H Gillis, James Davidson, Lund Washington, Peter Hagner, John Graham, John Peter Van Ness, Joshua Dawson, William Winston Seaton, John Tayloe III, Thomas Munroe, James Thompson, James H. Blake, David Easton, and Joseph Gales Jr.

The first entry in the earliest record book of the church, under date May 10, 1816, is in these words:

"May 10, 1816. At a meeting of citizens, resident in the First and Second Wards of the City of Washington, it was resolved that the following named gentlemen be appointed Trustees to manage the secular affairs of St. Johns Church, until a Vestry can be legally appointed, and to apply to the next Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church for a division of the Parish of Washington; so as to attach the Parish of St. John's Church, viz: John Davidson, Peter Hagner, James Thompson, John Peter Van Ness, John Tayloe III, Thomas H Gillis, James H. Blake, and Roger C. Weightman."

On December 27, 1816, being St. John's Day, Bishop James Kemp of Maryland performed the ceremonies of consecration, and religious services were conducted by the bishop and attendant clergy. The church building was designed by Benjamin Latrobe Esq, and constructed under his superintendence. He declined to receive any compensation for his valuable services, but the vestry voted him a pew free of rent, in acknowledgement of his generosity. This he declined, expressing his preference for some token that he might transmit to his children, and the testimonial took the form of a piece of plate.[5] John Tayloe III donated to the parish a communion service of silver, which Bishop William Meade, in his work on the old Churches of Virginia, says had been purchased by Col. Tayloe at a sale of the effects of the Lunenburg Parish Church/Farnham Church in Richmond County, Virginia, to prevent its desecration for secular use.[6]

Expansion edit

By 1842, it had become evident that further increases of the seating capacity of the church was expedient, and at a meeting of the pewholders called by public notice, on the eleventh of November, 1842, a committee, consisting of Richard Smith, John Canfield Spencer, Peter Hagner, Benjamin Ogle Tayloe, and William Thomas Carroll, was appointed to report a plan by which the number of pews should be increased, improved access given to galleries, and the interests of the existing pewholders properly adjusted. The committee reported on the twenty-eighth of November, and in the following April, Col. John James Abert, Gen. Winfield Scott, Frank Markoe, and Charles Gordon, were appointed a committee to carry the plan into effect. In its execution the original arrangement of pews and aisles, which had hitherto remained substantially unchanged, was very greatly altered. The box and high-back pews were changed to low-back seats; the brick pavement disappeared with the old form of the aisles; the chancel was enlarged, and the wine-glass pulpit was removed.

Still more extensive changes were made in 1883 under the direction of Bancroft Davis and Gen. Peter V. Hagner, when almost all the windows were filled with stained glass, dedicated, for the most part, to deceased members of the congregation. The chancel was considerably enlarged; a new organ placed within the chancel rail; an addition made at the southeast corner of the church for a chantry, and a new vestry room, choir rooms, and offices erected. Altogether at least 180 sittings were added, making the entire sitting accommodation of the church at 780.[5]

In 1902, the formal state funeral of British ambassador Lord Pauncefote took place in St. John's Church.

"Church of the Presidents" edit

 
Presidents' pew

Beginning with James Madison, every president has been an occasional attendee at St. John's, due to both the disproportionately Anglican religious affiliation of U.S. presidents and the church's proximity to the executive mansion. Perhaps the most devoted presidential attendee was Abraham Lincoln, who habitually joined evening prayer throughout the Civil War from an inconspicuous rear pew.[7] St. John's is popularly nicknamed the "Church of the Presidents".

President James Madison established the tradition of a "president's pew", selecting pew 28 for his private use in 1816.[4] The church was supported by pew subscriptions during its early history; although the vestry offered a pew to President Madison for free, he insisted on paying the rent.[7] During a renovation in 1843, the pews were renumbered, and the president's pew became pew 58.[4] President John Tyler asked that pew 58 be assigned to him, and paid for its use in perpetuity by presidents of the United States.[4] Additional renovations in 1883 renumbered the seat to pew 54, and this pew has remained reserved for the president's use when in attendance.[4] Although the "president's pew" is open for the use of any U.S. president who wishes to worship at the church, during weddings and other events the president usually sits in the front pew as a matter of protocol.[4]

President Chester A. Arthur commissioned a memorial window for his wife, Ellen Lewis Herndon Arthur, who died in 1880, which was displayed in the church's south transept that is visible from the White House and lighted from within at his behest.[8]

Role in the 2020 protests edit

 
President Donald Trump in front of the boarded-up Ashburton House, June 1, 2020

During the George Floyd protests on the night of May 31, 2020, several fires were set in Washington, D.C. including one set in the basement of Ashburton House, the parish house of St. John's Episcopal Church.[9] The fire was isolated to the church nursery and extinguished by firefighters.[10][11][12] According to the church's rector, the Reverend Rob Fisher, during the protests "a fire was lit in the nursery, in the basement of Ashburton House" of the church.[9] Fisher wrote that the fire was small, destroying the nursery room but leaving the rest of the church untouched, except by graffiti.[13]

The next day, police and National Guard troops cleared out demonstrators in the immediate area around the church, using tear gas, smoke canisters, and pepper balls, to allow President Donald Trump a photo opportunity standing in front of the church.[14][15][16] The Episcopal Bishop of Washington, Mariann Budde, who oversees the church, criticized the use of tear gas to clear the grounds of the church for a photo opportunity "as a backdrop for a message antithetical to the teachings of Jesus."[17]

Design edit

 
St. John's Episcopal Church in 1918
 
Interior

In 1966, St. John's Church was placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the U.S. Department of the Interior, and is designated a contributing property to the Lafayette Square Historic District and Sixteenth Street Historic District.

The church building was designed by Benjamin Latrobe, architect of the U.S. Capitol Building, and is constructed of stucco-covered brick, taking the form of a Greek cross. In 1820, the portico and tower were added.[18]

The bell in St. John's steeple weighs nearly 1,000 pounds (450 kg). It was cast by Paul Revere's son, Joseph, at his Boston foundry in August 1822 and installed at St. John's on November 30, 1822. President James Monroe authorized a $100 contribution of public funds toward the purchase of this church bell, which also served as an alarm bell for the neighborhoods and public buildings in the vicinity of the church. St. John's bell is one of two Revere bells in Washington, both cast and installed in 1822. Of the two, St. John's bell is the only one that has been in continuous service since its installation.[19] According to at least two accounts, whenever the bell tolls because of the death of a notable person, six ghostly men in white robes appear in the president's pew at midnight and then vanish.[20]

Artwork in the church includes two sculptures by Jay Hall Carpenter, a chapel cross in polished brass, and Ascent Into Heaven, a 3/4 lifesize bronze angel and child overlooking the church's columbarium.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ White House Historical Association
  3. ^ Burke, Daniel (January 20, 2016). "Inflammatory pastor preached to Trump before inauguration". CNN. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Grimmett, Richard F. St. John's Church, Lafayette Square: The History and Heritage of the Church of the Presidents, Washington, D.C. Minneapolis, Minn.: Hillcrest Publishing Group, 2009. ISBN 1-934248-53-3
  5. ^ a b Hagner, Alexander B. "History and Reminiscences of St. John's Church, Washington, D. C." Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C., vol. 12, 1909, pp. 89–114. www.jstor.org/stable/40066995.r
  6. ^ Touring Historyland: The Authentic Guide Book of Historic Northern Neck of Virginia, the Land of George Washington and Robert E. Lee, Volume 186, Northern Neck Association, 1934
  7. ^ a b "Historic Places: St. John's Episcopal Church". Abraham Lincoln Online. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
  8. ^ "Ellen Lewis Herndon Arthur". White House. Retrieved September 21, 2015.
  9. ^ a b Barnes, Sophia (June 1, 2020). "Historic Church Near White House Damaged Amid Unrest; Leaders Pray for Healing". NBC 4 Washington. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
  10. ^ Danner, Chas; Hartmann, Margaret (June 4, 2020). "More Than 10,000 Americans Have Been Arrested at George Floyd Protests: Updates". New York. Archived from the original on June 6, 2020. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  11. ^ Hermann, Peter; Bailey, Sarah Pulliam; Boorstein, Michelle (June 1, 2020). "Fire set at historic St. John's church during protests of George Floyd's death". The Washington Post.
  12. ^ McCreesh, Shawn (June 1, 2020). "Protests Near White House Spiral Out of Control Again". The New York Times. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  13. ^ Lowe, Lindsay (June 2, 2020). "A look at damage inside historic St. John's Church, which burned during protests". today.com. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  14. ^ Chappell, Bill (June 2, 2020). "'He Did Not Pray': Fallout Grows From Trump's Photo-Op At St. John's Church". NPR. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  15. ^ "Trump stands in front of St. John's Church holding Bible after threatening military action against protesters". NBC News. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  16. ^ Charles Creitz (June 1, 2020). "St. John's Church rector on aftermath of fire, impromptu Trump visit: 'Like I'm in some alternative universe'". Fox News. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  17. ^ "Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde's Response to the President". Episcopal Diocese of Washington Facebook Page. Archived from the original on February 26, 2022. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  18. ^ Federal Writers' Project (1937). Washington, City and Capital: Federal Writers' Project. Works Progress Administration / Government Printing Office. p. 126.
  19. ^ St. John's History 2010-10-13 at the Wayback Machine St. John's Church Lafayette Square website
  20. ^ Hauck, Dennis. Haunted Places: The National Directory. 2d ed. New York: Penguin Group, 2002. ISBN 0-14-200234-8

Bibliography edit

  • Hein, David. "For God and Country: Two Historic Churches in the Nation's Capital." Anglican and Episcopal History 56 (March 1987): 123–26.

External links edit

  • St. John's Episcopal Church Website
  • Washington, D.C., A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary – St. John's Church
  • The History and Heritage of the Church of the Presidents, presentation by Richard F. Grimmett (March 24, 2010); 46 min.

john, episcopal, church, lafayette, square, historic, episcopal, church, located, sixteenth, street, street, washington, along, black, lives, matter, plaza, greek, revival, building, designed, benjamin, henry, latrobe, adjacent, lafayette, square, block, from,. St John s Episcopal Church Lafayette Square is a historic Episcopal church located at Sixteenth Street and H Street NW in Washington D C along Black Lives Matter Plaza The Greek Revival building designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe is adjacent to Lafayette Square one block from the White House It is often called the Church of the Presidents St John s Episcopal ChurchU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkU S National Historic Landmark DistrictContributing PropertyShow map of Central Washington D C Show map of the District of ColumbiaShow map of the United StatesLocation1525 H Street N W Washington D C U S Coordinates38 54 1 41 N 77 2 9 91 W 38 9003917 N 77 0360861 W 38 9003917 77 0360861Built1815 1816Part ofLafayette Square Historic District ID70000833 NRHP reference No 66000868 1 Significant datesAdded to NRHPOctober 15 1966Designated NHLDecember 19 1960Designated NHLDCPAugust 29 1970Every sitting president has attended the church at least once since it was built in 1816 starting with James Madison 2 With the exception of Richard Nixon every president since Franklin D Roosevelt has attended spiritual services on Inauguration Day many at St John s 3 It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Inception and construction 1 2 Expansion 2 Church of the Presidents 2 1 Role in the 2020 protests 3 Design 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory editOrganized as a parish in 1815 it was named for Saint John the Evangelist The building opened and the first service was held at St John s Church on October 27 1816 The Rev William Dickinson Hawley served as its rector from 1817 to 1845 also serving as Chaplain of the Senate 4 Inception and construction edit Two years after Maryland had ceded to the United States the territory constituting the present District of Columbia the legislature of that state appreciating the necessity of providing for the spiritual needs of the Protestant Episcopal inhabitants who were to reside there and on their petition passed the act of 26 December 1794 creating a new parish to be known as Washington Parish to be composed of so much of the Rock Creek Parish in Montgomery County Maryland as St John s Parish in Prince George s County Maryland as was within the boundaries of the new city of Washington In the next year a vestry was elected by the Episcopalians of the eastern end of the new parish and the Rev Mr Ralph was appointed rector of the charge then organized and took his seat in the Maryland Convention of 1795 This congregation occupied a small building on D Street and New Jersey Avenue in the southeastern part of Washington which since 1780 had been used as a chapel of ease connected with St John Parish in Prince George s County In 1806 a vestry was elected from the people worshipping at this chapel and in 1807 a new church was established in that vicinity which was named Christ Church In Georgetown in 1796 the Protestant Episcopal inhabitants had inaugurated a movement resulting in the establishment of a church within the new parish which was consecrated in 1809 so that when the general government was removed from Philadelphia in 1800 the newcomers found three places of worship for Episcopalians within the district two previously mentioned and the third being St Paul s Church in Rock Creek Parish but all too far removed from the central and more populated portion of Washington to be practically useful in those days of almost impassable roads To supply this great need the residents in what was known as the First and Second Wards of Washington lying between Georgetown and Sixth Street in the year 1814 took decided measures to procure the erection of a church in the part of the city referred to The persons who seem to have been most actively engaged in this work were Thomas H Gillis James Davidson Lund Washington Peter Hagner John Graham John Peter Van Ness Joshua Dawson William Winston Seaton John Tayloe III Thomas Munroe James Thompson James H Blake David Easton and Joseph Gales Jr The first entry in the earliest record book of the church under date May 10 1816 is in these words May 10 1816 At a meeting of citizens resident in the First and Second Wards of the City of Washington it was resolved that the following named gentlemen be appointed Trustees to manage the secular affairs of St Johns Church until a Vestry can be legally appointed and to apply to the next Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church for a division of the Parish of Washington so as to attach the Parish of St John s Church viz John Davidson Peter Hagner James Thompson John Peter Van Ness John Tayloe III Thomas H Gillis James H Blake and Roger C Weightman nbsp James Heighe Blake nbsp Joseph Gales Jr ca 1844 by George Peter Alexander Healy nbsp William Winston Seaton of the National Intelligencer nbsp John Tayloe III by Gilbert Stuart on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp John Peter Van Ness 1805 portrait by Gilbert Stuart nbsp Roger Chew Weightman Mayor of Washington D C On December 27 1816 being St John s Day Bishop James Kemp of Maryland performed the ceremonies of consecration and religious services were conducted by the bishop and attendant clergy The church building was designed by Benjamin Latrobe Esq and constructed under his superintendence He declined to receive any compensation for his valuable services but the vestry voted him a pew free of rent in acknowledgement of his generosity This he declined expressing his preference for some token that he might transmit to his children and the testimonial took the form of a piece of plate 5 John Tayloe III donated to the parish a communion service of silver which Bishop William Meade in his work on the old Churches of Virginia says had been purchased by Col Tayloe at a sale of the effects of the Lunenburg Parish Church Farnham Church in Richmond County Virginia to prevent its desecration for secular use 6 Expansion edit By 1842 it had become evident that further increases of the seating capacity of the church was expedient and at a meeting of the pewholders called by public notice on the eleventh of November 1842 a committee consisting of Richard Smith John Canfield Spencer Peter Hagner Benjamin Ogle Tayloe and William Thomas Carroll was appointed to report a plan by which the number of pews should be increased improved access given to galleries and the interests of the existing pewholders properly adjusted The committee reported on the twenty eighth of November and in the following April Col John James Abert Gen Winfield Scott Frank Markoe and Charles Gordon were appointed a committee to carry the plan into effect In its execution the original arrangement of pews and aisles which had hitherto remained substantially unchanged was very greatly altered The box and high back pews were changed to low back seats the brick pavement disappeared with the old form of the aisles the chancel was enlarged and the wine glass pulpit was removed nbsp Bishop William Meade nbsp John Canfield Spencer nbsp Benjamin Ogle Tayloe by Thomas Sully nbsp John James Abert nbsp Winfield Scott 1835 portrait by George Catlin nbsp Bancroft DavisStill more extensive changes were made in 1883 under the direction of Bancroft Davis and Gen Peter V Hagner when almost all the windows were filled with stained glass dedicated for the most part to deceased members of the congregation The chancel was considerably enlarged a new organ placed within the chancel rail an addition made at the southeast corner of the church for a chantry and a new vestry room choir rooms and offices erected Altogether at least 180 sittings were added making the entire sitting accommodation of the church at 780 5 In 1902 the formal state funeral of British ambassador Lord Pauncefote took place in St John s Church Church of the Presidents edit nbsp Presidents pewBeginning with James Madison every president has been an occasional attendee at St John s due to both the disproportionately Anglican religious affiliation of U S presidents and the church s proximity to the executive mansion Perhaps the most devoted presidential attendee was Abraham Lincoln who habitually joined evening prayer throughout the Civil War from an inconspicuous rear pew 7 St John s is popularly nicknamed the Church of the Presidents President James Madison established the tradition of a president s pew selecting pew 28 for his private use in 1816 4 The church was supported by pew subscriptions during its early history although the vestry offered a pew to President Madison for free he insisted on paying the rent 7 During a renovation in 1843 the pews were renumbered and the president s pew became pew 58 4 President John Tyler asked that pew 58 be assigned to him and paid for its use in perpetuity by presidents of the United States 4 Additional renovations in 1883 renumbered the seat to pew 54 and this pew has remained reserved for the president s use when in attendance 4 Although the president s pew is open for the use of any U S president who wishes to worship at the church during weddings and other events the president usually sits in the front pew as a matter of protocol 4 President Chester A Arthur commissioned a memorial window for his wife Ellen Lewis Herndon Arthur who died in 1880 which was displayed in the church s south transept that is visible from the White House and lighted from within at his behest 8 Role in the 2020 protests edit Main article Donald Trump photo op at St John s Church nbsp President Donald Trump in front of the boarded up Ashburton House June 1 2020During the George Floyd protests on the night of May 31 2020 several fires were set in Washington D C including one set in the basement of Ashburton House the parish house of St John s Episcopal Church 9 The fire was isolated to the church nursery and extinguished by firefighters 10 11 12 According to the church s rector the Reverend Rob Fisher during the protests a fire was lit in the nursery in the basement of Ashburton House of the church 9 Fisher wrote that the fire was small destroying the nursery room but leaving the rest of the church untouched except by graffiti 13 The next day police and National Guard troops cleared out demonstrators in the immediate area around the church using tear gas smoke canisters and pepper balls to allow President Donald Trump a photo opportunity standing in front of the church 14 15 16 The Episcopal Bishop of Washington Mariann Budde who oversees the church criticized the use of tear gas to clear the grounds of the church for a photo opportunity as a backdrop for a message antithetical to the teachings of Jesus 17 Design edit nbsp St John s Episcopal Church in 1918 nbsp Interior In 1966 St John s Church was placed on the National Register of Historic Places by the U S Department of the Interior and is designated a contributing property to the Lafayette Square Historic District and Sixteenth Street Historic District The church building was designed by Benjamin Latrobe architect of the U S Capitol Building and is constructed of stucco covered brick taking the form of a Greek cross In 1820 the portico and tower were added 18 The bell in St John s steeple weighs nearly 1 000 pounds 450 kg It was cast by Paul Revere s son Joseph at his Boston foundry in August 1822 and installed at St John s on November 30 1822 President James Monroe authorized a 100 contribution of public funds toward the purchase of this church bell which also served as an alarm bell for the neighborhoods and public buildings in the vicinity of the church St John s bell is one of two Revere bells in Washington both cast and installed in 1822 Of the two St John s bell is the only one that has been in continuous service since its installation 19 According to at least two accounts whenever the bell tolls because of the death of a notable person six ghostly men in white robes appear in the president s pew at midnight and then vanish 20 Artwork in the church includes two sculptures by Jay Hall Carpenter a chapel cross in polished brass and Ascent Into Heaven a 3 4 lifesize bronze angel and child overlooking the church s columbarium References edit a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 White House Historical Association Burke Daniel January 20 2016 Inflammatory pastor preached to Trump before inauguration CNN Retrieved January 21 2016 a b c d e f Grimmett Richard F St John s Church Lafayette Square The History and Heritage of the Church of the Presidents Washington D C Minneapolis Minn Hillcrest Publishing Group 2009 ISBN 1 934248 53 3 a b Hagner Alexander B History and Reminiscences of St John s Church Washington D C Records of the Columbia Historical Society Washington D C vol 12 1909 pp 89 114 www jstor org stable 40066995 r Touring Historyland The Authentic Guide Book of Historic Northern Neck of Virginia the Land of George Washington and Robert E Lee Volume 186 Northern Neck Association 1934 a b Historic Places St John s Episcopal Church Abraham Lincoln Online Retrieved June 3 2020 Ellen Lewis Herndon Arthur White House Retrieved September 21 2015 a b Barnes Sophia June 1 2020 Historic Church Near White House Damaged Amid Unrest Leaders Pray for Healing NBC 4 Washington Retrieved June 3 2020 Danner Chas Hartmann Margaret June 4 2020 More Than 10 000 Americans Have Been Arrested at George Floyd Protests Updates New York Archived from the original on June 6 2020 Retrieved June 6 2020 Hermann Peter Bailey Sarah Pulliam Boorstein Michelle June 1 2020 Fire set at historic St John s church during protests of George Floyd s death The Washington Post McCreesh Shawn June 1 2020 Protests Near White House Spiral Out of Control Again The New York Times Retrieved June 1 2020 Lowe Lindsay June 2 2020 A look at damage inside historic St John s Church which burned during protests today com Retrieved June 6 2020 Chappell Bill June 2 2020 He Did Not Pray Fallout Grows From Trump s Photo Op At St John s Church NPR Retrieved June 2 2020 Trump stands in front of St John s Church holding Bible after threatening military action against protesters NBC News Retrieved June 2 2020 Charles Creitz June 1 2020 St John s Church rector on aftermath of fire impromptu Trump visit Like I m in some alternative universe Fox News Retrieved June 1 2020 Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde s Response to the President Episcopal Diocese of Washington Facebook Page Archived from the original on February 26 2022 Retrieved June 2 2020 Federal Writers Project 1937 Washington City and Capital Federal Writers Project Works Progress Administration Government Printing Office p 126 St John s History Archived 2010 10 13 at the Wayback Machine St John s Church Lafayette Square website Hauck Dennis Haunted Places The National Directory 2d ed New York Penguin Group 2002 ISBN 0 14 200234 8Bibliography editHein David For God and Country Two Historic Churches in the Nation s Capital Anglican and Episcopal History 56 March 1987 123 26 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St John s Episcopal Church Washington D C St John s Episcopal Church Website Washington D C A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary St John s Church The History and Heritage of the Church of the Presidents presentation by Richard F Grimmett March 24 2010 46 min Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St John 27s Episcopal Church Lafayette Square amp oldid 1182227856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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