With the extinction of the Rieter family in 1753, the church became part of the Nuremberg Holy Spirit Hospital[4] as part of its foundation assets and thus became the property of the city of Nuremberg.[2]
After 1806, the church was threatened with demolition during secularization.[4] However, citizen protests prevented this. The original sacristan's house was built at the same time as the church and burned down in the Thirty Years' War and was rebuilt during the Baroque period in the 1780s and in the second half of the 19th century. A shed extension was added, which is now also owned by the Protestant Church.[1][7] The Bavarian original cadastre shows All Saints' Day in the 1810s as a wasteland with two hearths, its own well, the church and the church field, spatially clearly separated from the old town of Kleinschwarzenloh.[8]
The parish was originally a branch of Katzwang, but since the 18th century it has been part of the parish of Kornburg,[9] today the Evangelical Lutheran parish of Kornburg in the Schwabach deanery.
On May 1, 1968, the church became the property of the Protestant parish of Kornburg.[2]
A small Steinmeyer organ with six registers has been available since 1973.
Source: Wikipedia