A postcard depicting the Methodist Episcopal ("M. E.") Church in Forest Grove, Oregon. It includes a brief note from Charles Walker to Winnette Sears and is postmarked November 13, 1911. This postcard is part of the Charles Lovell and Winnette Sears Walker Collection. Winnette was a 1906 alumna of Linfield College. Charles was an alumnus of Tualatin Academy who later became a musician and an insurance agent in Hillsboro, Oregon.
Black and white image of an Assemblies of God congregation in front of their church building. The church is evidently having a revival, as the sign on the front of the building proclaims 'God-sent Revival! Don't Miss It!!!
Black and white image of a church featuring cross-gabled construction, a ribbon of stained glass windows across the main end, and a large square belfry with an open bell section.
Photograph of a wooden church with a large, square bell tower at the front. Arched, double panes windows bracket a small, roofed front porch. Stairs with railings lead up on either side of the porch. An arched window and circular window are located above the front porch. Four arched, stained-glass windows run the length of the church. The rectory, a square, two-story building, is located to the back and left of the church. The first St. Anthony's Church was constructed on what is now SW Pacific Highway between 1910-1911. The first mass celebrated was on Easter Sunday, 1911. In 1959, as the number of parishioners increased, a new, larger church was constructed next door.
The church stood was the corner of Main Avenue and Second Street. It was dedicated in June 1926. The building was razed and the name later changed to Beaverton Christian Church. A 1920s car is parked on a muddy, unpaved street in front of the church.
The Garden Home Community Church on SW Garden Home Road at SW 71st Avenue. This building, also known as the Garden Home Community Methodist Church, was built in 1918. It was open to members of all denominations. The building was sold to the West Hills Unitarian Fellowship in 1961, who moved it to a different site. As of the 2010s, the building remains in use by the Unitarian Church.