Results for Bethesda
Bethesda Fountain and Terrace
Designed by Calvert Vaux and Jacob Wrey Mould, these stair...
Bethesda
(Boys Home)
This Property Has Been
Placed On ...
National Historic Landmark-Bethesda Presbyterian Church
National Historic Landmark- Bethesda Presbyterian Church <...
Bethesda Church
Presbyterian. Began as "Hart's Chapel," about 1765. Mother...
Cooper's Academy / Bethesda Methodist Church
[Front]:
Cooper’s Academy, built in 1905-06, ...
Bethesda Baptist Church
Organized shortly after the Civil War with Rev. Edward Rhu...
Bethesda Presbyterian Church
A Church Divided
Bethesda Presbyterian Church, compl...
Battle Of Bethesda Church
Here stood Bethesda Church, founded about 1830 and used by...
Bethesda Baptist Church
When Bethesda Baptist Church was organized in 1785, it was...
Bethesda Presbyterian Church and Cemetery
In 1879 William Lee Henderson (b1808), his wife Eleanor Sh...
Results for Bethesda
Bethesda Fountain and Terrace
Designed by Calvert Vaux and Jacob Wrey Mould, these stairways, terrace and fountain were the focal feature of the original plan for Central Park by Vaux and Frederick Law Omsted. The fountain sculpture by Emma Stebbins, inspired by the biblical ...
Bethesda
(Boys Home)
This Property Has Been
Placed On The
National Register
Of Historic Places
By The United States
Department Of The Interior
Marker is on Old Montgomery Road, in the median.
Courtesy hmdb.org
National Historic Landmark-Bethesda Presbyterian Church
National Historic Landmark- Bethesda Presbyterian Church
Dedicated in 1822, this is one of the few churches designed by Robert Mills (1781-1855) remaining in America. Its neo-classical temple form represents Mills' work as a maturing architect influenced by Jeffersonian classicism.
Courtesy National ...
Bethesda Church
Presbyterian. Began as "Hart's Chapel," about 1765. Mother of many churches. The present building erected 1944, stands 3/4 mile south.
Marker is at the intersection of Bethesda Church Road and Bethesda Cemetery Road, on the left when traveling south on Bethesda ...
Cooper's Academy / Bethesda Methodist Church
[Front]:
Cooper’s Academy, built in 1905-06, was a private boarding school for the black children of this community until 1927, and a public school 1927-1958. Founded by Moses Cooper, H.J. Cooper, and Ada E. Martin, it was first called Cooper’s Academy, ...
Bethesda Baptist Church
Organized shortly after the Civil War with Rev. Edward Rhue as its first pastor, Bethesda Baptist Church purchased this site by 1867. Construction of this sanctuary began in 1922 during the pastorate of Rev. A.W. Puller and was completed and ...
Bethesda Presbyterian Church
A Church Divided
Bethesda Presbyterian Church, completed 1835, is a powerful reminder of the effect of the Civil War on the Tennessee home front. As the war clouds gathered, conflicting sympathies divided the congregation, and the church closed its doors. After ...
Battle Of Bethesda Church
Here stood Bethesda Church, founded about 1830 and used by Baptists and Disciples of Christ until it burned in 1868. In May 1864, during the Civil War, Maj. Gen. Gouverneur K. Warren's V Corps formed the left flank of Lt. ...
Bethesda Baptist Church
When Bethesda Baptist Church was organized in 1785, it was known as Whatley’s Mill Church, and was in Wilkes County before it was added to Greene in 1802. When the present building was erected in 1818, the name was changed ...
Bethesda Presbyterian Church and Cemetery
In 1879 William Lee Henderson (b1808), his wife Eleanor Shelby (b1817) and their nine children moved from their Alabama home to Texas by wagon train. Church records indicate worship services were held in a shelter built by the Hendersons shortly ...