Difference between revisions of "St Nicholas Hoonah Alaska"

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m (Linked to Current Website (through St. Nicholas Juneau))
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[[File:2010-08-14 & 15 Hoonah (1b).jpg|thumb|Iconostasis of St. Nicholas Hoonah, 2010]]
 
[[File:2010-08-14 & 15 Hoonah (1b).jpg|thumb|Iconostasis of St. Nicholas Hoonah, 2010]]
 
== Further Reading ==
 
== Further Reading ==
*Kan, Sergei. ''Memory Eternal: Tlingit Culture and Russian Orthodox Christianity through Two Centuries.'' Seattle: University of Washington Press. 1999. ISBN: 0-295-97806-6.
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*Kan, Sergei. ''[https://uwapress.uw.edu/book/9780295993867/memory-eternal/ Memory Eternal: Tlingit Culture and Russian Orthodox Christianity through Two Centuries.]'' Seattle: University of Washington Press. 1999. ISBN: 0-295-97806-6.
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== External Links ==
 
== External Links ==
 
*[https://stnicholasjuneau.org/alaskan-orthodoxy-the-mission-to-hoonah-angoon/ St. Nicholas, Juneau and the Mission to Hoonah and Angoon]
 
*[https://stnicholasjuneau.org/alaskan-orthodoxy-the-mission-to-hoonah-angoon/ St. Nicholas, Juneau and the Mission to Hoonah and Angoon]

Revision as of 00:38, September 10, 2020

St. Nicholas, Hoonah, in August of 2010

St Nicholas Orthodox Church in Hoonah was founded in 1897 when 14 local families donated the tract of land the current building stands on, St. Nicholas Orthodox Church in Hoonah took several years to get itself established.

The Russian Mission lacked the staff and funds to build a church and when the land was surveyed in 1905, the surveyor noted that the land showed no signs of occupancy. Funds were raised and, by 1910, a chapel was built which served the people of Hoonah until 1929, when the current building was constructed.

St. Nicholas was one of the few buildings to survive the catastrophic fire of June 1944 and was remodeled in the 1950s to expand the altar area and orient the worship towards the east.

Iconostasis of St. Nicholas Hoonah, 2010

Further Reading

External Links