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・ St. John the Evangelist Anglican Church (Foam Lake)
・ St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
・ St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church (Indianapolis, Indiana)
・ St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
・ St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church (Silver Spring, Maryland)
・ St. John the Evangelist Church
・ St. John the Evangelist Church (Cambridge, Massachusetts)
・ St. John the Evangelist on Patmos
・ St. John the Evangelist Parish
・ St. John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church
・ St. John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church (Baltimore, Maryland)
・ St. John (crater)
・ St. John (restaurant)
・ St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church
・ St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church (Cleveland, Ohio)
St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church (Omaha, Nebraska)
・ St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church (Topeka, Kansas)
・ St. John Ambulance
・ St. John Ambulance Canada
・ St. John Ambulance in Singapore
・ St. John Ambulance of Malaysia
・ St. John Ambulance South Africa
・ St. John Arena
・ St. John Arena (Steubenville)
・ St. John Association for Sri Lanka
・ St. John Baptist Church
・ St. John Baptist Church (Dorseyville, Louisiana)
・ St. John Baptist Church (Lecompte, Louisiana)
・ St. John Baptist Church (Mason City, Iowa)
・ St. John Bay


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St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church (Omaha, Nebraska) : ウィキペディア英語版
St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church (Omaha, Nebraska)

St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church was the first church for African Americans in Nebraska, organized in North Omaha in 1867.〔(2003) (The Negroes of Nebraska: The Negro goes to church. ) Memorial Library. Retrieved 7/14/07.〕 It is located at 2402 North 22nd Street in the Near North Side neighborhood. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The building was constructed in the center of Omaha's North Side in the Prairie School architecture style. Prairie School architecture is rare, and this architectural gem in urban Nebraska is particularly unusual for being designed and built in the 1920s, after the Prairie Style’s rapid loss of popularity beginning after 1914.
==About==
Organized in the fall of 1865, the first minister of St. John was Rev. W. T. Osborne, who was also the first African American minister in Nebraska. The first meetings being held at a private residence on Capitol Avenue and Ninth Street in present-day downtown Omaha. After worshiping for a short time on Harney Street, the church moved to Douglas and Fifteenth Streets until the summer of 1865. That year a lot was purchased on the corner of Eighteenth and Webster Streets in Near North Omaha. The original church, designed by renowned local African American architect Clarence W. Wigington, was built for $1,000.〔(n.d.) (Andreas' History of the State of Nebraska: Douglas County ). Retrieved 10/29/07.〕
The longest standing member of the church was Mrs. Eliza Turner, who until her death in 1938 regularly attended St. John's for seventy years.〔Lee, L. (2003) Memorial Library.〕 Today St. John hosts a thriving congregation, and the church serves in a variety of capacities to the surrounding community.

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