South Carolina Department of Archives and History
National Register Properties in South Carolina

Christ Church (Episcopal) and Churchyard, Greenville County (10 N. Church St., Greenville)
S1081772300401 S1081772300402 S1081772300403 S1081772300404 S1081772300405
Facade Right Oblique Left Oblique Rear Elevation
with Churchyard
Steeple Detail
S1081772300406        
Floorplan

Historically, Christ Church is Greenville’s oldest organized religious body (1820) as well as the city’s oldest church building (1852-1854). It has traditionally been recognized as an outstanding example of Gothic architecture. Each addition has been in keeping with its style and original plan for a cruciform building. A magnificent stained glass window by Mayer of Germany is a memorial to Ellison Capers, rector of Christ Church (1866-88), bishop of the Diocese of South Carolina (1893-1908), and Confederate brigadier general. In the churchyard surrounding the building are buried former governor of South Carolina Benjamin Franklin Perry, several Greenville mayors, many Confederate war dead, and the first Greenville man lost in World War I. Also interred here are the parents and son of the first Bishop of the Diocese of Upper South Carolina, Vardry McBee, the “Father of Greenville,” and many other church and civic leaders. The Reverend John DeWitt McCullough is the credited architect. Listed in the National Register May 6, 1971.

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