Tag: ChurchPage 1 of 2

36 S Green Street Church

36 S Green Street was the location of a two-story, five-bay brick building which once housed the Christian Church which was organized in Henderson in 1841. The east…

Zion United Church of Christ

The church building was erected 1872-73 on property obtained from Ben and Jane Letcher and by Dec. 14, 1873, the building was far enough completed for its dedication….

St. Clement’s Mission

St. Clement’s Mission, organized 1887, was a parish school in which upwards of sixty pupils were taught the rudiments of common school education, housekeeping, sewing, etc., and the…

Trinity AME Zion Church

The church was built in 1870 and closed in 2010 when it was the Trinity A.M.E. Zion Church. Demolished in 2017 to build new German American Bank at…

National Register of Historic Places listings in Henderson

National Register of Historic Places listings in Henderson. The eight-digit number next to each listing is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System…

327 Second Street

Second and Green Street intersection facing North. Standard Oil station, Conoco Station, and now the location of Corpus Christi Clinic.

Norris Chapel Baptist Church

The Norris Chapel Missionary Baptist Church was organized in 1874 by Rev. L. B. Evans with members from the First Baptist Church congregation. For the first three or…

Saint Louis Cemetery

Saint Louis Cemetery is Holy Name’s parish owned cemetery that dates back to the late 1800s and Saint Louis Catholic Church. Located in the 1400 block of South…

Audubon Missionary Baptist Church

214 Letcher Street Now the site of East End Water Park Reference: WKU Kentucky Museum

Immanuel Baptist Temple

Demolished 21 April 2018 to make way for new Henderson Fire station. References: Gleaner: Whoosh! Henderson’s historic Immanuel Baptist Temple demolished

Bird’s-Eye View of Henderson

View of Second Street looking East. Visible is Kingdon Hotel and Holy Name Church.

First Presbyterian Church

Construction began Aug. 17, 1893, although the church wasn’t dedicated until June 10, 1894. It wound up costing $36,000. A four-alarm fire destroyed First Presbyterian Church at the…