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Latitude: 57.5449 / 57°32'41"N
Longitude: -2.9528 / 2°57'10"W
OS Eastings: 343066
OS Northings: 850930
OS Grid: NJ430509
Mapcode National: GBR M82S.81W
Mapcode Global: WH7L3.MM3C
Plus Code: 9C9VG2VW+XV
Entry Name: Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, Seafield Avenue, Keith
Listing Name: Seafield Avenue, Holy Trinity Episcopal Church and Enclosing Walls
Listing Date: 22 February 1972
Category: B
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 380312
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB35678
Building Class: Cultural
Also known as: Keith, Seafield Avenue, Holy Trinity Episcopal Church
ID on this website: 200380312
Location: Keith
County: Moray
Town: Keith
Electoral Ward: Keith and Cullen
Traditional County: Banffshire
Tagged with: Church building
Alexander Ross, Inverness, 1882. Gothic, cruciform church
with tower. Rubble, contrasting tooled sandstone dressings
and margins.
Principal entrance in base of 3-stage tower at SW;
pointed-headed hoodmoulded doorway; wide pointed-headed
louvred openings in upper stage with stiff leaf capitals to
nook-shafts, corbelled wallhead, angle water spouts, parapet,
pyramidal slate roof and apex cast-iron weathervane.
Triple stepped lancets under continuous hoodmould light E
gable; substantial window with geometric tracery in W gable.
Single and paired lancets in 7-bay flanks and tall narrow
lancets in transepts. Cross finials; slate roofs.
INTERIOR: entrance lobby in base of tower. Nave and chancel
with open timber roof, principal rafters supported by corbel
stones; some stained glass.
ENCLOSING WALLS: building surrounded by coped rubble walls,
low at street frontage. Pair slender cast-iron gatepiers
flank entrance with pair spearhead cast-iron gates.
Ecclesiastical building in use as such.
Amongst fittings the church contains a simple wooden table
which is all that survives from an early Episcopal chapel at
Rosarie (between Keith and Mulben) and 'Seabury chair' used
by Bishop Kilgour when he consecrated Bishop Seabury as first
bishop of the American Episcopal church, Aberdeen 1784.
Present church replaced earlier 'small, plain building' of
1808 at rear of Land Street.
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