The cornerstone of the present—
fifth—church building was laid on
November 12, 1927, by the Right
Rev. Frederick Llewelyn Dean, Lord
Bishop of Aberdeen and the Orkneys,
Scotland. This Scottish bishop, rather
than an American bishop, performed
the ceremony due to the connection
of this parish with Scotland, for it
was here, rather than in England, that
Samuel Seabury was consecrated a
bishop. The church is built of stone,
in the Decorated Gothic style,
modeled on a 13th-century small
English country church. It was
consecrated on June 9, 1930, by the
Right Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster,
fifth Bishop of Connecticut, and was
completed during the rectorship of
the Rev. Louis B. Howell. The P.L.
Fowler architectural firm of Trenton,
New Jersey, was the designer.