“I do not wish to lay down as a general rule that good taste requires that every alteration which from age to age has been made in our churches should be obliterated, and the whole reduced to its ancient uniformity of style. These varieties are indeed most valuable, as being the standing history of the edifice, from which the date of every alteration and repair may be read as clearly as if it had been verbally recorded; and in many cases the later additions are as valuable specimens of architecture as the remains of the original structure, and merit an equally careful preservation.” (62)