Fairhaven, some cool buildings
Thanks for all the support and prayers for our daughter-in-law, she has developed an infection, and there not quite sure what type or where, but treatign her with a broad range antibiotic hoping that clears it up, so keeping her sedated and on the ventilator for now, or as of last evening when we visited the hospital, he blood levels wer eimproving so hopefully the bleeding has stopped, lets hope and pray for a good day today
Good Morning
Today I am sharing something a bit different for me, its not often I go for photo walks during the day, but back in spring i had something to do in Fairhaven, a neighboring town from where I live, and I took my camera bag with me and went for a stroll after I had taken care of what I had to do
Starting with the Unitarian church
Sony A7iv 19mm F11 1/200 Sec ISO 100
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The Unitarian Memorial Church in Fairhaven was built, financed and donated to the Unitarians in 1904 by Henry H. Rogers in memory of his mother, Mary Eldredge Huttleston. The church was designed by Boston architect Charles Brigham in a Gothic Revival style.[4] It is one thousand and fourteen feet (309 m) in height, one hundred feet (30 m) long in body and fifty-three feet (16 m) wide. The nave is thirty-two feet (9.8 m) wide and seventy-one feet (22 m) long. The main aisle is sixty-two feet (19 m) long and six feet (1.8 m) wide. The church, parish house and former parsonage (now Harrop Center) of the Unitarian Society are so placed as to form three sides of a quadrangle, set among well-kept lawns and shrubbery. Granite (locally quarried) with Indiana limestone decorative carvings dominate the exterior while marble and limestone carvings dominate the interior. All stonework artistry was created by forty-five Italian craftsmen brought to Fairhaven by Rogers.
The Rogers family donated a lot to the town
Included the town hall building
Sony A7iv 21mm F11 1/160 Sec ISO 100
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The Fairhaven Town Hall is a significant historical landmark, gifted to the town in the late 19th century by Standard Oil magnate Henry Huttleston Rogers. Known for its High Victorian Gothic architecture, the building was dedicated on February 22, 1894, with a humorous speech by Rogers' close friend, author Mark Twain
Sony A7iv 17mm F11 1/125 Sec ISO 100
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I found the story behind this library very interesting
Millicent Library in Fairhaven, Massachusetts was donated to the town by the family of Millicent Gifford Rogers, the youngest daughter of Abbie Gifford and wealthy industrialist Henry Huttleston Rogers. Young Millicent had died of heart failure in 1890 when she was barely seventeen years old. The library was dedicated on January 30, 1893. It was designed by Charles Brigham in the Richardsonian Romanesque style.
Millie dearly loved to sketch and read. She is to have once said on a visit to Fairhaven "I wish we had a good library! When she died at such a young age, her grieving family sought an appropriate means of memorializing her short life. Because she had been an avid reader, especially of poetry, the Rogers decided that they would build and donate to the town of Fairhaven a library named for her and given in the names of her sisters and brother.
The cornerstone was laid in September, 1891
Sony A7iv 18mm F11 1/250 Sec ISO 100
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Ground was broken for the new church on Main Street on August 5, 1965.
The new St. Mary's Church was built directly to the south of the old building, which was later demolished to create a parking lot.
The new building was dedicated on October 30, 1966.
IT was funded from donations, I do now see online whether the Rogers family was involved
And that’s all folks
unless stated otherwise all photos used in my posts are taken and owned by myself, if you wish to use any of my images please contact me.






