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Highland United Methodist Church facts for kids

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Highland United Methodist Church
HighlandUnitedMethodistChurch02.jpg
Highland United Methodist Church is located in Michigan
Highland United Methodist Church
Location in Michigan
Highland United Methodist Church is located in the United States
Highland United Methodist Church
Location in the United States
Location 205 W. Livingston Rd., Highland, Michigan
Area less than one acre
Built 1886
Built by Lester and George St. John
Architectural style Gothic
NRHP reference No. 81000314
Quick facts for kids
Significant dates
Added to NRHP July 9, 1981

Highland United Methodist Church (also known as Highland Station House) is a historic Victorian Gothic church building and library at 205 West Livingston Road in Highland, Michigan. It was designated a Michigan State Historic Site and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1981.

History

The Methodist congregation in Highland was first organized in 1865, and met in the Hickory Ridge School. They continued to meet in the school house until 1886, when they had raised enough funds to build this structure. The church was built by local carpenters George and Lester St. John on three lots in Highland, donated by J. B. and Betsey Crouse, and was completed in late 1886. In 1946, the Hickory Ridge School (built in 1835) was moved to the site of the church and connected to serve as a parish hall. Another portion was added to the rear of the structure in 1957.

In 1980, the building was purchased by Highland Township, renovated and expanded, and put into use as a library in 1982. The library moved into a new building in 2002. The structure is currently known as the Highland Station House and houses the Huron Valley Council for the Arts.

Description

The Highland United Methodist Church is a rectangular Victorian Gothic structure with a gable roof, clapboard siding, and a projecting square tower at one corner, topped with a belfry and spire. The windows are tall and narrow, with original wooden louvered blinds on the exterior. Scrollsaw filigree decorates the window heads, the front gable, and the tower. A double-door entrance is on the base of the tower, and is sheltered by a hood.

The adjoining addition, originally the 1835 Hickory Ridge School, is a single-story, gable-roofed, wood frame structure.

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