First Presbyterian Church and Manse (Baltimore, Maryland)
First Presbyterian Church and Manse is a historic Presbyterian church located at West Madison Street and Park Avenue in the Mount Vernon-Belvedere neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland, United States. The church is a rectangular brick building with a central tower flanked by protruding octagonal turrets at each corner. At the north end of the church is a two-story building appearing to be a transept and sharing a common roof with the church, but is separated from the auditorium by a bearing wall. The manse is a three-story stone-faced building. The church was begun about 1854 by Norris G. Starkweather and finished by his assistant Edmund G. Lind around 1873. It is a notable example of Gothic Revival architecture and a landmark in the City of Baltimore.
First Presbyterian Church and Manse (Baltimore, Maryland)
First Presbyterian church in Baltimore, Maryland from a pre-1923 postcard
Edmund George Lind was an English-born American architect, active in Baltimore, Atlanta, and the American south.
Peabody Institute Library, designed in 1875 by architect Edmund George Lind.
Lind designed Washington, Georgia's Mary Willis Library in 1889.