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Lowell Heights Olivet REDRAFT NRform revised with plans
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III. PUBLIC HEARING b. NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION i. Lowell Heights - Olivet African Methodist Episcopal Church Nomination to the National Register of Historic Places
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Lowell Heights Olivet REDRAFT NRform revised with plans
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United States Department of the Interior <br />National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form <br />NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 <br /> <br />Lowell Heights-Olivet African Methodist <br />Episcopal Church <br /> St. Joseph County, IN <br />Name of Property County and State <br />Section 7 page 6 <br /> <br />second story steps in again and features a stone water table. The towers’ parapet is capped with <br />stone. <br /> <br />The north and south facades are very similarly arranged with stair towers on the east ends and a <br />projecting, double-gabled bay on the west half. The north bay extends further to the north than <br />the south bay extends from the building. The south façade’s stair tower features an entry on the <br />first story (at grade, photo 0002). The entry features a projecting brick surround and deeply <br />recessed entry with Gothic arched top. The large metal entry door is divided into nine panels and <br />is topped with a wood panel of board and battens. The surround features buttress-like corners <br />capped with stone and a gabled parapet, also capped with stone. The tower has corner pilasters, <br />stepped in at the bottom and top of the second story. A stone sill course/water table is at the <br />bottom of the second story window. The wood window is divided into two art glass sashes with <br />pointed tops. The shaped stone lintel features rounded shoulders shaped with the window sashes. <br />The top of the second story features a stone string course and the tower has a crenellated parapet, <br />also capped with stone, and a low-pitched stone gable. A stone cross is centered in the top of the <br />parapet. <br /> <br />The nave is west of the tower. It features two bays divided by a tall brick pilaster capped with <br />stone. Each bay features a large Gothic arched window composed of art glass divided by tracery <br />with similar division as the front façade. Two wood basement windows divided into nine panes <br />is in each bay. The projecting bay with double-gables is in the west half of the south façade <br />(right side of photo 0003). Its east gable is slightly larger than the west gable. The gabled <br />sections are divided by a two-story bay (stairway) with a section of shed roof. The east gabled <br />section features a row of four 1/1 wood windows on the first and second story. The windows <br />feature a stone sill and lintel of soldier brick. A row of three wood windows, divided into nine <br />panes, is in the basement. The east gable features a narrow slit window in the top of the gable. <br />The west gabled section features a row of three 1/1 wood windows in the first and second story. <br />The windows feature a stone sill and lintel of soldier brick. The basement windows has been <br />filled in with brick. The bay centered between the gabled sections features an entry with a nine <br />panel metal door and non-historic gabled metal canopy. A 1/1 window is west of the entry at the <br />landing between the entry and first story, and 1/1 windows with stone sills are in the two <br />landings between the first and second story. <br /> <br />The north façade is similar to the south façade with few differences (photos 0004-0005). The east <br />tower’s first story features a pair of wood casement windows composed of art glass (left side of <br />photo 0005). The window opening has a stone sill and lintel of soldier brick. The nave and <br />projecting bay’s gabled sections are identical to the south façade except that there are two <br />basement windows divided into nine panes in the west gabled section. The narrow section that <br />divides the gabled sections has a large entry porch with gabled roof and brick front wall with a <br />steeply-pitched gabled parapet (left side of photo 0004). The porch’s front wall features a large <br />Gothic arched opening and corner pilasters capped with stone. The entry is composed of a pair of <br />metal doors divided into nine panels, side-lites (covered with wood), and transom composed of <br />art glass. Narrow 1/1 wood windows flank the porch’s gabled roof in the landing between the <br />first and second story. The second story features a three-sided oriel bay covered with wood
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