Results for Friends Meeting House
Friends Meeting House
The Friends Meeting House in Wilmington was e...
Appoquinimink Friends Meeting House
The Appoquinimink Friends Meetings House, erecte...
Friends Log Meeting House
Surrounded by Burgoyne's Indian allies in 1777 but finding...
National Historic Landmark - Merion Friends Meeting House
National Historic Landmark - Merion Friends Meeting House ...
National Historic Landmark-Buckingham Friends Meeting House
National Historic Landmark- Buckingham Friends Meeting Hou...
Great Friends Meeting House
In 1639, Helen and Nicholas Easton, John Clarke, Wi...
Friends Meetinghouse
The Hoover family worshipped in this building along with n...
Horsham Friends Meeting Meeting House
Built 1803
has been placed on the
Natio...
The Friends School at Birmingham Meeting House
Was established at this place about 1753. It was for many ...
Evesham Friends Meeting House
Oldest Friends Meeting House
in Burlington County – ...
Results for Friends Meeting House
Friends Meeting House
The Friends Meeting House in Wilmington was erected between 1815 and 1817. Like many Quaker congregations, members of the Wilmington Meeting House were active in the Underground Railroad. In 1787, Delaware passed a law prohibiting the importation and exportation ...
Appoquinimink Friends Meeting House
The Appoquinimink Friends Meetings House, erected in 1783, is located in a community where a strong Quaker antislavery movement existed. The Meeting House is associated with John Hunn (1818-1894) and John Alston (1794-1874), two Underground Railroad "station masters" who ...
Friends Log Meeting House
Surrounded by Burgoyne's Indian allies in 1777 but finding Friends unarmed stacked arms and attended meeting peaceably.
Marker is on Meeting House Road just east of Hoag Road, on the left when traveling east.
Courtesy hmdb.org
National Historic Landmark - Merion Friends Meeting House
National Historic Landmark - Merion Friends Meeting House
Merion Friends Meeting House is the building most closely associated with the Merioneth Adventurers, a group of Welsh Quakers who came to Pennsylvania in 1682.
The earliest known migration of Celtic-speaking Welsh ...
National Historic Landmark-Buckingham Friends Meeting House
National Historic Landmark- Buckingham Friends Meeting House
Buckingham Friends Meeting House is nationally significant for its role in providing a model for the development of the American Friends? meeting house. Built in 1768, Buckingham was the first meeting house to be ...
Great Friends Meeting House
In 1639, Helen and Nicholas Easton, John Clarke, William Coddington and others left Portsmouth, the settlement founded in 1638 by Anne Hutchinson and others on the northern end of Aquidneck Island. They came south and founded Newport. Newport’s European settlers ...
Friends Meetinghouse
The Hoover family worshipped in this building along with neighbors and relatives who were members of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers as they are often called. West Branch was predominately a Quaker community in the 1850's when this ...
Horsham Friends Meeting Meeting House
Built 1803
has been placed on the
National Register
of Historic Places
by the United States
Department of the Interior
Marker is at the intersection of Easton Road (Pennsylvania Route 611) and Meetinghouse Road, on the right when traveling north on Easton Road.
Courtesy hmdb.org
The Friends School at Birmingham Meeting House
Was established at this place about 1753. It was for many years under the care of John Forsythe, the First Head Master of Westtown Boarding School opened in 1799. Dr. William Darlington was a pupil at Birmingham.
Marker is on ...
Evesham Friends Meeting House
Oldest Friends Meeting House
in Burlington County – Used
as barracks for General Clinton’s
troops in June 1778
Built 1760 Addition 1798
Marker is at the intersection of Moorestown - Mount Laurel Road and Hainesport Road, on the left when traveling east on Moorestown - ...