Holy Trinity Church remains the main church in Murree
The Holy Trinity Church is one of many churches the British built in Murree during their rule, several of which still stand today.
The Holy Trinity Church was built in 1857, the same year that the people of the subcontinent waged war against their foreign rulers. The first brick of the church was laid on March 2, 1850, but the church bell first rang on May 17, seven years later, to signal the formal start of church services for army and civil administration officials in the British army’s Northern Command.
The main prayer hall can accommodate more than 400 people at a time. The east, north and south windows of the hall are stained glass, in the Anglo-Indian style, and the roof and floor are wood. The church furniture, such as the altar, lectern, pulpit and so on, are wooden and decorated with Kashmiri carving.
A pipe organ used for hymns and carols as old as the church itself stands in its original place, but is no longer in working condition.
Along the wall, plaques hold details of prominent individuals who died in Murree during the colonial period.
Maj W.U. Cole and Maj F.S. Dimon, 3rd Dragoon Guards ((Prince of Wales’), died in Murree on Sept 3, 1982; a plaque has been installed in memory of both men by the officers and members of their regiment.