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Another article which is in good shape overall. Some comments:
Lead: ...the parish bought a nearby lot...: maybe word this to better reinforce to the reader that this is the site at the northeast corner of 3rd and C Streets NW, but without mentioning the actual address (that may be undue repetition). I was thinking along the lines of "the parish bought the lot with which the church is best associated..." or something to that effect.
New sanctuary: (1818-1895): date ranges should be separated by an endash, not a hyphen. That said, I don't think it necessary to include the date range anyway, no other named individual is treated this way and the reader can simply follow the link itself for dob/dod information.
New sanctuary: designing the new building.: suggest "to design the new building."
Later history: The Evening Star stated "an innovation in such structures will be a kitchen, thing whose...: there should be a cite at the end of this quote. Also, I think there may be a missing word. Should that be "...a kitch, something whose..."
Later history: A renovation from 1897-1898: As above, endash instead of the hyphen for date ranges.
Demolition: The Washington Post reported "Many venerable ...: there should be a cite at the end of this quote.
Image tags check out OK.
That's it for me.
Zawed (
talk) 10:51, 16 June 2022 (UTC)reply