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

Church of the Advent, Spartanburg County (141 Advent St., Spartanburg)
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1864 Sanctuary
North Elevation
1864 Sanctuary
and Bell Tower
Norht and West
Elevation
1864 Sanctuary
West Elevation
1864 Sanctuary
Orginal Entrance
South Elevation
1864 Sanctuary
Lancet Window
North Elevation
S1081774204406 S1081774204407 S1081774204408 S1081774204409 S1081774204410
1897 Sanctuary
South and East
Elevation
1897 Sanctuary
South Elevation
1897 Sanctuary
East Elevation
1912 Parish Hall
South and East
Elevation
1912 Parish Hall
East Elevation
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Bell Tower Bell Tower
Entrance
Interior
Sanctuary
Interior
Sanctuary
Outbuilding
Boy Scout Hut

(Episcopal Church of the Advent) The Church of Advent is significant both as the home of the first Episcopal congregation organized in Spartanburg County, and as an excellent example of a Gothic Revival sanctuary and church complex designed before the Civil War, with significant alterations and additions in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The sanctuary was designed in 1851 by the Reverend John DeWitt McCollough, rector at the Church of Advent 1850-1857 and 1859-1875, with later major alterations and additions designed by Silas McBee (1853-1954) and A. H. Ellwood and Sons in 1897. McCollough is also known to have designed a number of other churches in South Carolina. Major H.J. Dean’s quarry supplied the granite for the church, and slaves or free blacks, including several skilled carpenters, performed much of the labor. The sanctuary was finally completed in early 1864; a bell tower was added in 1870. The sanctuary was enlarged in 1897 to its current cruciform plan. Pendleton Hall, built 1912-13 as an addition to the north side of the sanctuary and designed by A. H. Ellwood and Sons, serves as the parish hall. The Church of the Advent also sponsors Boy Scout Troop No.1, founded in 1914 by Dr. Pendleton as the first Boy Scout troop organized in South Carolina. The Boy Scout hut on the church grounds was built in 1927. The church cemetery surrounds the sanctuary. Many of its monuments are of notable artistic merit. Listed in the National Register May 26, 2000.

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