Landmarks Conservancy helps add more strength and polish to two historic churches

The New York Landmarks Conservancy announced $250,000 worth of grants awarded to 22 historic religious properties across the state, including two in Western New York.

Trinity Episcopal Church in Buffalo will receive $12,000 to help fund project management for chancel stained-glass window restoration. St. Johnโ€™s Episcopal Church in Youngstown will get $3,000 to help pay for roof and gutter repairs, as well as foundation repointing.

โ€œOur grants help maintain historic religious institutions that often anchor their communities,โ€ Conservancy President Peg Breen said in a news release. โ€œOur recent grantees have food, cultural and outreach programs that reach well beyond their congregations.โ€

Trinity Episcopal, built between 1869 and 1905 โ€“ when Buffalo developed into a fast-growing, major industrial city โ€“ contains stained glass and interior decoration by American decorative-arts master John La Farge.ย The congregation houses nonprofit programs for the Buffalo Urban League, Gay & Lesbian Youth Services, the Greater Buffalo United Accountable Healthcare Network, Massachusetts Avenue Project and others. Its visitor center provides tours of the stained glass windows.ย 

St. Johnโ€™s, completed in 1878, is one of few Gothic Revival-style, board-and-batten churches in the region.ย The congregation was established in 1759 at Fort Niagara. Church members today are heavily involved in mission work and community events.

The Conservancyโ€™s Sacred Sites Program provides congregations with matching grants for planning and carrying out restoration projects. It has provided 1,600 grants since 1986ย โ€“ totaling almost $15 millionย โ€“ to 840 religious institutions statewide.



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