Detroit - Trinity Lutheran Church I - Anthem
Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church
1345 Gratiot Av
Detroit,MI
United States
The Historic Trinity Lutheran Church is a church located in downtown Detroit, Michigan. It occupies the Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church complex, located at 1345 Gratiot Avenue. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983
Detroit - Trinity Lutheran Church: Congregational Hymn
Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church
1345 Gratiot Av
Detroit,MI
United States
The Historic Trinity Lutheran Church is a church located in downtown Detroit, Michigan. It occupies the Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church complex, located at 1345 Gratiot Avenue. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983
Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity Divine Service complete/ full
Rev Mark Braden
Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church
Detroit, Michigan 9-24-17
Historic Saint Anne de Detroit Church : Detroit Dreaming
Established two days after Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac landed at Detroit and began construction of Fort Ponchartrain, Saint Anne de Detroit Church, located in Southwest Detroit near Mexican Town, the Ambassador Bridge and the Michigan Central Train Station, was first built in 1701 with additions and renovations and rebuilds over the next 200 years. It is a marvel of 18th century architecture.
David Eberhard Funeral 05 14 16
A Celebration of Jesus' Victory Over Death For Rev. Dr. David Eberhard at Historic Trinity Lutheran Church in Detroit, MI (May 14, 2016).
For those of you who may not know, if you click on the time in parentheses (as long as it is blue or whatever your link color is) it will take you to that place in the video. On my phone the YouTube app doesn't have the time show up in blue (as a link), but on my computer the times show up as a link in blue.
The service starts with The Entrance Reading - Romans 6:1-11 (7:08).
The Processional Hymn - For All the Saints (8:37)
Invocation (13:42)
Psalm 23 (13:53)
The Collect (14:35)
The Word of God - Old Testament - Job 19:23-27 (15:20)
Anthem - The Road Home (16:21)
The Epistle - 1 Corinthians 15:50-57 (20:08)
Holy Gospel - John 14:1-6 (22:00)
Creed (23:00)
Hymn - I Know That My Redeemer Lives (23:57)
Sermon - Rev. Ronald Guettler (27:45)
The Prayers (40:15)
Our Father - Russ Thurman, Soloist (44:15)
The Greeting - Kurt Heise, State of Michigan House of Representatives (46:28)
Anthem - The Lord Bless You and Keep You (50:13)
Amazing Grace - Bagpipe and Organ (52:21)
The Benediction (55:16)
The Recessional - Going Home (56:33)
Mariners' Church, Detroit (Maritime Sailors' Cathedral) - REAL USA Ep. 88
In a musty old hall in Detroit they prayed in the Maritime Sailors' Cathedral. Gordon Lightfoot's single line in the smash hit song The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald in 1975 brought an otherwise rustic old stone church on Jefferson Avenue in downtown Detroit to world recognition. Yet despite the notoriety of the song, not everyone realizes that Mariners' Church is a real place that has stood (at the time of this writing) for roughly 150 years. Today the little stone church still serves the maritime community of the Great Lakes, though now surrounded by glass and steel high-rise buildings and the entrance to the tunnel to Windsor, Ontario, Canada. Though we were not able to go inside on this trip, we would very much like to get the opportunity in the future to take you inside this historical church.
Donate to The REAL United States Video Blog:
Music: Long Road Ahead, Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
Stay connected!
Facebook Page:
Twitter:
Google+
Text updates on your mobile phone:
Website:
See (most) all video locations marked on Google Maps:
EXACT LOCATION of video:
Latitude: 42.32928
Longitude: -83.04204
Ep. 20: Green Dot Stables, Entreslam, Reverend Eberhard
On this episode Detroit Unspun TV slides into Green Dot Stables where Chef Les Molnar demonstrates how he makes top notch sliders at his new Corktown restaurant near Downtown Detroit. With its horse racing theme, it's a great place to get in the mood for Thoroughbred racing season as well as the most genuine Poutine outside of Quebec. The Detroit Voices segment hears from Reverend Dr. David Eberhard, the engaging pastor of Historic Trinity Lutheran Church in Eastern Market. We also get introduced to Entreslam, the Ann Arbor networking event created by So Ballew and Christa Chambers-Price that uses MOTH Story Hour-style storytelling to connect business people. Finally, we learn more about Project Lighthouse, Downtown Detroit's Neighborhood Watch Program. Just follow the Blue Banners 24/7 for help or assistance at more than 30 locations Downtown. These people and stories are helping to re-imagine Detroit.
God Bless America - Irving Berlin Sung by Jim LeDuc
God Bless America sung by Jim LeDuc at Historic Trinity Lutheran Church, Detroit Michigan on July 5th, 2015. Karl Osterland orgainst and Director of Music playing the Skinner Organ.
The amazing historic churches of Detroit
Churches include Sweetest Heart of Mary, Most Blessed Sacrement, Old Saint Mary's, First Presbyterian, Saint Albertus, Christ Church, Saint Cecila, Immaculate Conception, Saint Florian, Fort Street Presbyterian, Trinity Lutheran, Saint John's, Saint Anne de Detroit among others
They Builded a City (1951)
2015.011.051a
2015.011.051b
Video compiled from two silent color 16mm film reels containing excerpts from the pageant They Builded A City, put on by Detroit-area Lutheran schools on June 10, 1951, on the grounds of the Lutheran School for the Deaf at Nevada Avenue and Van Dyke in celebration of the 250th anniversary of Detroit's founding. The pageant features a series of scenes from Detroit's history as well as some concerning the history of Lutheranism in the area. A group representing a Sunday school teacher and his students appear on stage throughout the production. Audio from the production is available on the tape 2016.077.020.
The film opens with the title card Pageant of 250th. Anni. of Detroit Mich. The film then cuts to the stage, which is outdoors, and has a large backdrop painted with images of Fort Pontchartrain; the Detroit River; the flags of France, Great Britain, and the United States, the fire of 1805, a military encampment, and a church. After the initial shot of the stage, the camera pans across the audience and choir. Signs label portions of the choir as East Side and West Side.
The first scene from the play is of a group of people around a table with a document--presumably representing Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, writing a letter to Louis de Buade de Frontenac, Governor of New France about the location for Fort Pontchartrain.
A group of students dressed as Native Americans then walk across the stage, and meet with people in French costume. Eventually they are joined by several people in British soldier costume.
In the next shot, drawings of livestock and people are lined up on stage to illustrate a set of statistics about the city from 1773.
After another cut, a thick cloud of smoke obscures the stage representing the fire of 1805. Next, a diagram illustrating the Woodward plan for Detroit is hung on stage, and a group of people set up chairs to illustrate the debate over it.
In the next shot, with a tent now on stage, several students in blue military costume perform a scene--presumably relating to the War of 1812 and Detroit's surrender. A group of students in dresses and bonnets, and Native American costumes then take the stage, then a student in a minister costume assumes a central role--possibly Detroit's first Lutheran pastor Rev. Fredrich Schmid. Another scene follows with a group of people in dark suits engaged in a discussion. Half of the group gets up and walks off stage, presumably to demonstrate the group that left St. Matthew's Lutheran Church to found Trinity Lutheran Church.
The final scene on the first reel is a classroom scene, in which each student has a writing slate, and one wears a dunce cap. A man in a Civil War-era Union soldier's uniform then appears to address the class and audience.
The second reel opens with a man in a suit on stage making a pitch to the audience for donations. He stands beside the Union army costume from the previous scene. The camera then cuts to the choir conductor.
In the next shot, a group of boys are in dark clothing and positioned around a table with a sheet of paper held behind them. As they gesture to the sheet. The Sunday school class stands beside a man at a typewriter, who portrays a Detroit News editor who praised the city's Lutheran community in the paper.
Another classroom scene follows in which students locate places on a globe. In a wider shot, signs reading A Birthday Party at our Old Folks Home (referring to the Evangelical Lutheran Old Folks Society in Monroe), and Welcome 1911 (in reference to the activities of the Walther League in the area)
In a following shot, students in World War I-era military, medical, and industrial worker costumes line the stage. Several students also hold Buy Liberty Bonds banners.
In the next scene, a group of children are seated behind a desk with a Save Our Schools banner draped across its front. This scene concerns the Lutheran community's response to the campaign by James Hamilton to amend Michigan's constitution to ban private and religious schools. During this scene a police officer is also shown bringing a man with a boater hat before a seated individual. This presumably represents Father Gabriel Richard's 1820s conviction for defamation of character, which is briefly mentioned in the narration at this point.
In the next scene, a group of student in choir uniforms holds letters spelling out Lutheran Hour, a nationally broadcast radio show which started in Detroit.
The remainder of the reel appears to contain the production's March of Time segment--costumed cast members from each of the play's vignettes walk across the stage.
HotSauce, Jazz Festival Hart Plaza Downtown Detroit MI. 2001.wmv
The Blessing of the Fleet at the Mariner's Church in downtown Detroit.
The Rev. William Fleming talks about the Blessing of the Fleet at Mariner's Church of Detroit, Sunday, March 13, 2016. (DAX MELMER/The Windsor Star)
The Most Amazing Churches of Detroit - 4K
Forget your preconceived notions of Detroit. Some scenes shot inside the amazing churches of Detroit. Includes Sweetest Heart of Mary, Most Blessed Sacrament, Old Saint Mary, First Presbyterian, Saint Albertus, Christ Church, Saint Cecilia, Immaculate Conception, Saint Florian, Fort Street Presbyterian, Trinity Lutheran, Saint Johns, Sweetest Heart of Mary
You can find my photos of these churches at :
WELCA at the ELCA Youth Gathering | Teens respond after visiting the WELCA exhibit
Sara VanderBaan, Trinity Lutheran, Grand Rapids, Mich., returns to the WELCA exhibit with her group to let us know that they contacted their pastor and told her that they wanted their youth ministry group to focus on ending human trafficking.
St. Albertus Church, Detroit, MI,7-31-10
This is a silent video tour of the oldest Polish Catholic church in the United States, built in 1870. Located on St. Aubin & East Canfield near Downtown Detroit Michigan, this church has exquisite architecture inside. My wife Regina's father Stanley, who lives with us & is 91 years old, was an altar boy here in the late 1920's-30's. They have guided tours throughout the mild months plus a nice Polish festival in midsummer. Notice the high arched ceilings with painted pictures and the pillars, along with many Biblical statues & Polish heritage pictures & writings.
Take a tour of the Hackley House
A look inside the historic Hackley House in downtown Muskegon. The home was built in the late 1800s and is open for holiday tours beginning on Nov. 28.
Abandoned Detroit Church Coleman Memorial Baptist Church Nicknamed St Shitty w a Basketball Court
I explored St Shitty an abandoned church with a gymnasium in Detroit and was joined by Damien. It is nicknamed St Shitty for the state or condition of the church and also the amount of bird poop in it but it still has beautiful bones and a beautiful structure. The gym though is actually in pretty good shape.
Social Channels
Friends Featured
The Hush House Radical Black History Museum Detroit, a Film by Messiah Youth Collective3
This beautiful film about The Hush House Black Community Museum, in Detroit, MI was produced, filmed and edited by a the youth collective of the Messiah Baptist Church in Detroit, MI in 2015. Bro. Craig Peterson is their mentor and teacher!
Time capsule church in Detroit with electricity left on
Several months after this video launched, an organization bought this church and began the fixing up of the interior and exterior. The church is back to it's former glory and accepting parishioners from all over Detroit.
Did you enjoy this explore? Please let me know how I'm doing by commenting or reaching out.
Definitely keep up and support the channel by following the links below and giving my pages a follow. Join the DetroitEXP Patreon to promote and help spread my channel across the United States.
---Patreon---
---Facebook---
---Tony---
*Instagram ‣
*Twitter ‣
Can you think of anywhere we should check out? Would you like to set up a collaboration? Please shoot me an email:
DetroitExploration@gmail.com
Grand Master Henry A. Wilson, Jr. 1984-1985
Most Worshipful Grand Master, 1984-1985
Henry A. Wilson, Jr. was born in Detroit on June 12, 1939. He attended Southeastern High School and received his Bachelor of Science degree in Biology and Genetics from Michigan Lutheran College in 1968. In 1978 he received a Masters of Art degree in Computer Science from the University of Detroit. He worked toward a Doctorate Degree in Education, Evaluation, Measurements and Research at Wayne State University. He was a partner and department head of the Management Advisory Services of Alexander Grant & Company, a national Certified Public Accounting firm.
He met his wife, Mildred, while he was stationed in Stephenville, Newfoundland while in the United States Air Force. They married on June 17, 1962.
He was raised as a Master Mason in Grosse Pointe Lodge No. 584 on February 18, 1972. Four years later he served his Lodge as Worshipful Master. In 1977, he was elected representative for District Three to the Board of General Purposes. The delegates at the 153rd Annual Communication elected him as Worshipful Grand Marshal in May 1978.
In York Rite Masonry, he is a member of East Detroit Chapter No. 185, Royal Arch Masons, Jeremiah Council No. 88, R. & S.M., Highland Park Commandery No. 53, Knights Templar and Prince Edward York Rite College No. 8. In 1983, he was elected to receive the Order of the Purple Cross of York Rite Sovereign College of North America. He is also a holder of the Gold Cross Award of York Rite Colleges.
In Scottish Rite Masonry, he is a member of the Valley of Detroit. He is Past Sovereign Prince, Carson Council, Princes of Jerusalem 1982-1983. He was coroneted a 33º Mason in Cleveland Ohio in 1985.
He joined Moslem Temple A.A.O.N.M.S. in 1973, and served as a member of the Fraternal Relations Committee. In 1982, he was nominated for membership in the Detroit Court of the Royal Order of Jesters. In 1978, he joined the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite Valley of Detroit where he was active in the portrayal of the dramatic degrees. He is also a member in the Lakeshore Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star in Grosse Pointe and Detroit, and the Downtown Hi-12 Club. He was named as an Honorary Member of the following Lodges: Harper Woods No. 585, Dearborn Lodge No. 172 and William M. Perrett Lodge No. 524.
He also served as Treasurer and Junior Warden and as an usher, for St. Columbus Episcopal Church. He was also a member of the reorganization committee for Wayne County.
During his term of office he Dedicated wings A & B of the Michigan Masonic Home on August 4, 1984.