Faith Bible Church, Northridge, California
History
The church is in the Carpenter Gothic Victorian style. It was built nine years after the Southern Pacific Railroad first laid tracks through Northridge, which was then known as Zelzah station, in 1908. When it was built, the church was originally known as the Norwegian Lutheran Church, as the six families that formed the congregation were of Norwegian descent.
Built of wood in the basilican style, with the steeple at the entrance, the church's early Gothic style is differentiated from the High Victorian Gothic by the thinness of moldings and its generally monochromatic appearance. One writer observed that, "with its steep stairs and narrow girth, it looks like a church you'd find sitting all alone on the Kansas plains."
Present
The original church building still stands at 18531 Gresham Street in Northridge. For many years, it was known as the Faith Bible Church.
More recently, the church has been acquired and operated as a Korean congregation known as either the Northridge Free Methodist Church, or the Los Angeles Antioch Church. The sign on the church in March 2008 (in photograph to the right) identified it as the Los Angeles Antioch Church.
See also
- List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in the San Fernando Valley
- History of the San Fernando Valley to 1915
References
- ^ Los Angeles Department of City Planning (September 7, 2007). "Historic - Cultural Monuments (HCM) Listing: City Declared Monuments" (PDF). City of Los Angeles. Retrieved 2008-05-29.
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(help) - ^ "Northridge traces its origins to founding of a watering hole". Los Angeles Times. 1985-06-27.
- ^ Marcus Whiffer (1969). American Architecture Since 1780. MIT Press.
- ^ Kevin Roderick. "Hometown Memories". Kevin Roderick: Author Journalist Editor.
- ^ "Northridge, California". churchangel.com.
- ^ "Korean Churches in Los Angeles". laokay.com.