
This Carpenter Gothic building is the oldest church continually in use in the Panhandle. Clad in horizontal weatherboards and painted white, it reflects an Episcopal parish church tradition. Entered through a corner tower, which has a witch’s-hat steeple, the nave is illuminated by a large Gothic-styled window at the rear, opposite the articulated chancel at the front. Like the courthouse (PH7), St. John’s demonstrates the early (1887) settlement of Clarendon, before picturesque conceptions of design began to change in favor of more formal and symmetrical ideas.