The First United Methodist Church is a historic church building at 204 S. Main in Hamburg, Arkansas. The brick Gothic Revival building was built in 1910 for Hamburg's first organized congregation, founded in 1850, which had previously met in a wood-frame building on the same site. It was designed by the Nolley Brothers, who owned a local brickyard, and was based on Gothic Revival designs that one of them had observed at the St. Louis World's Fair. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.
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| - First United Methodist Church (Hamburg, Arkansas) (en)
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| - The First United Methodist Church is a historic church building at 204 S. Main in Hamburg, Arkansas. The brick Gothic Revival building was built in 1910 for Hamburg's first organized congregation, founded in 1850, which had previously met in a wood-frame building on the same site. It was designed by the Nolley Brothers, who owned a local brickyard, and was based on Gothic Revival designs that one of them had observed at the St. Louis World's Fair. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992. (en)
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| - First United Methodist Church (en)
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| - First United Methodist Church (en)
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| - Nolley, J.A.; Nolley, Sebe (en)
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| - Location in Arkansas##Location in United States (en)
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| - 33.22472222222222 -91.79777777777778
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| - The First United Methodist Church is a historic church building at 204 S. Main in Hamburg, Arkansas. The brick Gothic Revival building was built in 1910 for Hamburg's first organized congregation, founded in 1850, which had previously met in a wood-frame building on the same site. It was designed by the Nolley Brothers, who owned a local brickyard, and was based on Gothic Revival designs that one of them had observed at the St. Louis World's Fair. The original building's main facade consisted of two towers, one higher than the other, flanking a single-story sanctuary section. Although the main roof spine runs between the towers, there is a large gable between the towers perpendicular to that line facing the front of the building. This gable end is decorated by a stained glass window designed for the church by the Company of St. Louis. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992. (en)
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| - POINT(-91.797775268555 33.224723815918)
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