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  1. United First Parish Church is an American Unitarian Universalist congregation in Quincy, Massachusetts, established as the parish church of Quincy in 1639. The current building was constructed in 1828 by Boston stonecutter Abner Joy to designs by Alexander Parris.

    • Parris, Alexander
    • 1828
  2. The United First Parish Church building, considered the finest existing Greek Revival church in New England, is a National Historic Landmark. It was designed by noted architect Alexander Parris, who also designed Quincy Market in Boston.

  3. First Parish Church Parsonage, Arlington; First Parish Church of Dorchester; First Parish Church (Duxbury, Massachusetts) First Parish Unitarian Church, Medfield; First Parish Church in Plymouth; United First Parish Church (Quincy, Massachusetts) First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church of Scituate; First Parish Church (Taunton ...

  4. United First Parish Church. United First Parish Church, the Adams' church and location of their burial crypt. The church where both presidents and first ladies are entombed in the Adams Crypt is in close walking distance to the park visitor center but is not and has never been run by the National Park service.

  5. This church remains the most important surviving example of the granite ecclesiastical architecture that Alexander Parris designed in the Greek Revival style. Unlike his unfinished design for St. Paul's Cathedral in Boston (BD3; 1819–1820), Parris completed the Quincy church with a tower and colonnaded and domed belfry, better representing ...

  6. English: The United First Parish Church, Quincy, Massachusetts. Built 1828, architect Alexander Parris. The graves of Presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams are in a crypt beneath the church.

  7. Welcome to United First Parish Church. Church of the Presidents. A member of the Unitarian Universalist. Association of Congregations. DONATE. Worship service. Sunday, May 5, 2024. Worship Service “The Gift of Pluralism” - Rev. Rebecca Froom. We live in a society that is both diverse and divisive.