Narrative Web
Location

First Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Manchester, N.H.

Sunlight filters through stained-glass windows into the nave, converted to a bustling polling station where voting booths stand amid wooden pews. Applause erupts as Abbey Bartlet emerges, deftly deflecting reporters' probes on her ballot with sharp wit that shifts focus to national stakes. President Bartlet follows, citing election law to dodge questions before endorsing a $600 million school bond, his words turning civic ritual into a moral frame for the country. Reporters cluster tight, crowd cheers swell, blending church sanctity with election-day tension and political maneuvering.
2 events
2 rich involvements

Detailed Involvements

Events with rich location context

S4E7 · Election Night
Abbey Deflects; Bartlet Reframes the Stakes

First Emmanuel Episcopal Church (the polling space) is the immediate, tangible setting where private voting becomes a public performance; its converted nave, curtained booths, and congregational presence turn the civic ritual into campaign theater.

Atmosphere

Warm, bustling, and slightly celebratory—applause, clustered reporters, and a sense of civic ceremony mingled with campaign energy.

Functional Role

Stage for public exit, media confrontation, and political messaging.

Symbolic Significance

A church used as a polling place underscores the intersection of community ritual and democratic process; it also symbolically legitimizes the Bartlets through congregational approval.

Access Restrictions

Open to the public as a polling place; media present but functionally bounded by election moderators and booth corridors.

Curtained voting booths Applause from gathered voters/supporters Reporters clustered outside the booth area
S4E7 · Election Night
Framing the Vote: Country Over State

First Emmanuel Episcopal Church functions as the ceremonial and practical polling site where the private act of voting becomes a public moment. The church's nave, voting booths, and entrance provide the physical and symbolic stage for media, crowd, and candidate interaction.

Atmosphere

Warm, civic, and slightly performative: applause, clustered reporters, and the hush of a polling place mixed with campaign energy.

Functional Role

Stage for public interaction and political messaging; meeting point for voters, press, and the candidates' public appearance.

Symbolic Significance

A civic-religious space that underscores the sanctity of the vote while being repurposed as political theater.

Access Restrictions

Open to public voters and media consistent with a polling place; moderated by local election officials who control the immediate corridor around entrances.

Sunlight through stained glass (implied in canonical description of the location). Curtained voting booths set among pews; soundscape of applause and reporters' questions.

Events at This Location

Everything that happens here

2