File:Darul Rasheed - former Queen of the Most Holy Rosary RC Church - Buffalo, New York - 20200517.jpg
Page contents not supported in other languages.
Tools
Actions
General
In other projects
Appearance
Size of this preview: 800 × 600 pixels. Other resolutions: 320 × 240 pixels | 640 × 480 pixels | 1,024 × 768 pixels | 1,280 × 960 pixels | 2,560 × 1,920 pixels | 3,619 × 2,714 pixels.
Original file (3,619 × 2,714 pixels, file size: 3.14 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons. Information from its description page there is shown below. Commons is a freely licensed media file repository. You can help. |
Summary
DescriptionDarul Rasheed - former Queen of the Most Holy Rosary RC Church - Buffalo, New York - 20200517.jpg |
English: Darul Rasheed, located at 1040 Sycamore Street (corner Sobieski Street) in Buffalo, New York, as seen in May 2020. Originally built as home of Queen of the Most Holy Rosary Roman Catholic Church and School - one of, if not the only remaining combination church/school building in the city upon its closure - its design sees architect Władysław Zawadzki being flexible with his signature aesthetic as he adapts it to the form of a church, and adding some Gothic Revival elements to the mix as well - the rows of small pedimented dormer windows and overall stout appearance is classic Zawadzki, yet here he adapts the baskethandle arch motif he prefers in his windows into blunt Gothic arches to match the compound one at the front entrance. Queen of the Most Holy Rosary is a parish with a most interesting history - it traces its roots to 1895, when the internecine warfare at St. Adalbert's over issues of ownership of church property led one faction to break away not only from the parish but from the diocese itself, establishing Holy Mother of the Rosary, Buffalo's first "independent Catholic" church, which later aligned itself with the Scranton, Pennsylvania-based Polish National Catholic Church. They built a church building for themselves several years later but soon ran into trouble paying off the debt incurred by its construction; the Buffalo Diocese, seeing an opportunity to crush the renegade independent church for good, purchased the building at a 1913 foreclosure auction, and Queen of the Most Holy Rosary was the parish they established to fill the building. The Polish National Church won the building back in a lawsuit two years later, whereupon the Diocese commissioned Zawadzki to design and construct a new church for the now-homeless Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, which he did in 1917. After that, the congregation settled into a mostly uneventful existence that ended in the diocese's 1993 consolidation of inner-city parishes. The building was purchased in 1994 by Darul Uloom Al-Madaniya Islamic Seminary for use as its girls' school, known as Darul Rasheed; ironically, they also own the original Holy Mother of the Rosary building too, which is now their mosque. |
Date | |
Source | Own work |
Author | Andre Carrotflower |
Camera location | 42° 54′ 06.49″ N, 78° 50′ 23.27″ W | View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap | 42.901803; -78.839797 |
---|
Licensing
I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following license:
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
- You are free:
- to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
- to remix – to adapt the work
- Under the following conditions:
- attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
- share alike – If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same or compatible license as the original.
Items portrayed in this file
depicts
some value
17 May 2020
42°54'6.491"N, 78°50'23.269"W
0.00136612021857923497 second
2.2
4.15 millimetre
image/jpeg
d8ab224db85c3257da85040e757f44533f996aaf
3,290,233 byte
2,714 pixel
3,619 pixel
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 03:29, 18 May 2020 | 3,619 × 2,714 (3.14 MB) | Andre Carrotflower | Uploaded own work with UploadWizard |
File usage
The following pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed):
Metadata
This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
If the file has been modified from its original state, some details may not fully reflect the modified file.
Camera manufacturer | Apple |
---|---|
Camera model | iPhone 6s Plus |
Exposure time | 1/732 sec (0.0013661202185792) |
F-number | f/2.2 |
ISO speed rating | 25 |
Date and time of data generation | 13:58, 17 May 2020 |
Lens focal length | 4.15 mm |
Latitude | 42° 54′ 6.49″ N |
Longitude | 78° 50′ 23.27″ W |
Altitude | 189.882 meters above sea level |
Horizontal resolution | 72 dpi |
Vertical resolution | 72 dpi |
Software used | 13.3.1 |
File change date and time | 13:58, 17 May 2020 |
Exposure Program | Normal program |
Exif version | 2.31 |
Date and time of digitizing | 13:58, 17 May 2020 |
Meaning of each component |
|
Shutter speed | 9.5158267915928 |
APEX aperture | 2.2750070476914 |
APEX brightness | 9.697375174133 |
Exposure bias | 0 |
Metering mode | Pattern |
Flash | Flash did not fire, compulsory flash suppression |
DateTimeOriginal subseconds | 100 |
DateTimeDigitized subseconds | 100 |
Supported Flashpix version | 1 |
Sensing method | One-chip color area sensor |
Scene type | A directly photographed image |
Custom image processing | HDR (original saved) |
Exposure mode | Auto exposure |
White balance | Auto white balance |
Focal length in 35 mm film | 29 mm |
Scene capture type | Standard |
Speed unit | Kilometers per hour |
Speed of GPS receiver | 0 |
Reference for direction of image | True direction |
Direction of image | 315.59968553459 |
Reference for bearing of destination | True direction |
Bearing of destination | 315.59968553459 |