Church of the Divine Unity

Coordinates: 40°43′25.02″N 73°59′52.7″W / 40.7236167°N 73.997972°W / 40.7236167; -73.997972
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Former Church of the Divine Unity
Map
General information
Architectural styleGothic Revival
Town or city
United States of America
Construction started?
Completedc.1845
DemolishedBefore 1866
Cost?
ClientThe American Unitarian Association
Technical details
Structural systemLimestone masonry
Design and construction
Architect(s)?
Engineer?

The Church of the Divine Unity was a former Unitarian and Universalist church located on the east side of Broadway between Prince and Spring Streets, SoHo, Manhattan. It was built c.1845 and likely transferred to American Unitarian Association after c. 1854. Subsequently, it was adaptively reused as an art gallery (the Düsseldorf Gallery), then an office, and finally was demolished sometime before 1866.[1][2]

“On August 6, 1866, [prolific diarist George Templeton]

American Express Company, and Capin's Universalist Church, which had been serving as an art gallery, on the east side of Broadway between Prince and Spring Streets, was demolished. Strong, neither an apologist for the past nor a dedicated futurist, took a fatalist view: ‘So things go. Let ‘em go!’[3]

References

40°43′25.02″N 73°59′52.7″W / 40.7236167°N 73.997972°W / 40.7236167; -73.997972