Immaculate Conception Catholic Church
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Location: | 121 E. Duval St., Jacksonville, Florida |
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Built: | 1907 |
Architect: | Hubbard,M. H.; Halsema-Woodcock Co. |
Architectural style: | Gothic |
Governing body: | Private |
MPS: | Downtown Jacksonville MPS |
NRHP Reference#: |
92001695 [1] |
Added to NRHP: | December 30, 1992 |
Immaculate Conception Catholic Church is a historic Catholic church in Jacksonville, Florida, U.S. It is located at 121 East Duval Street in downtown Jacksonville. The current building, dating to 1910, was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1992. It is part of the Catholic Diocese of St. Augustine; its current pastor is Father Ed Murphy.
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The congregation was established in about 1845 as a mission of the Catholic parish of Savannah in Georgia, and the first church building was constructed by 1847. Immaculate Conception was designated its own parish in 1854, but the original building was destroyed by Union forces during the American Civil War. A second building was planned shortly after Jacksonville became part of the newly-created Catholic Diocese of St. Augustine in 1870, and was completed in 1874. This was destroyed along with most of downtown Jacksonville in the Great Fire of 1901.[2]
The current building was designed in 1905 by architect M. H. Hubbard, also the designer of Bethel Baptist Institutional Church. Construction began in 1907 and completed on December 8, 1910, when the building was dedicated. The structure is an example of Late Gothic Revival architecture, considered one of the best such examples in Florida, featuring a cruciform floor plan, pointed arches, tracery on the windows, buttresses and pinnacles, high spires, and a high vault on the interior. The building's 178.5-foot (54.4 m) steeple, topped by a gold-plated cross, was the highest point in the city for three years until the Heard National Bank Building was finished in 1913.[2]
In 1979 the church received solemn dedication, meaning the structure cannot be demolished willfully or converted to another purpose besides a church.[2] On December 30, 1992 it was listed in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.[3]