Results for Meeting House
Strawbridge Log Meeting House Site
Built in 1764 by Robert Strawbridge, the first Methodist p...
McKnight's Meeting House
Est. by Methodists ca. 1782. Annual Conferences held here ...
Fourth Creek Meeting House
Presbyterian. Established ca. 1750; on this site by 1756. ...
Hopewell Friends Meeting House
One mile west
Meeting established 1734
since w...
Birmingham Friends Meeting House
Erected in 1763
Used as a hospital after
T...
Brick Meeting House
William Penn set aside lot no. 30 (500 acres) of the “Nott...
Greens Farms Meeting House
Jennings Trail
Congregational Society of
Green...
20th Ward Meetinghouse
Formed in 1856 to accommodate rapid growth in the area, th...
Old Nottoway Meeting House
This is the site of the Old Nottoway Meeting House, built ...
Meeting House 1816
Religious Society of Friends
Grew from New-Wark Meet...
Results for Meeting House
Strawbridge Log Meeting House Site
Built in 1764 by Robert Strawbridge, the first Methodist place of worship erected in America. Successors are Stone Chapel (1783) 3 miles northeast, and Bethel (1821) 1 mile south.
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Marker is on Marston Road (Maryland Route 407) 0.3 miles east of ...
McKnight's Meeting House
Est. by Methodists ca. 1782. Annual Conferences held here in 1789, 1790, & 1791 by Bishop Asbury. Site was 400 yards N.W.
Marker is on U.S. 158, on the right when traveling east.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Fourth Creek Meeting House
Presbyterian. Established ca. 1750; on this site by 1756. The Rev. James Hall first regular minister.
Marker is at the intersection of West End Avenue (North Carolina Route 90) and Meeting Street on West End Avenue.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Hopewell Friends Meeting House
One mile west
Meeting established 1734
since which time
regular religious services
have been held
* Erected 1934 *
Marker is at the intersection of Martinsburg Turnpike (U.S. 11) and Hopewell Road (County Route 672), on the right when traveling south on Martinsburg Turnpike.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Birmingham Friends Meeting House
Erected in 1763
Used as a hospital after
The Battle of Brandywine
September 11, 1777
Marker is on S. Birmingham Road, on the right when traveling north.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Brick Meeting House
William Penn set aside lot no. 30 (500 acres) of the “Nottingham Lots” in 1702 for a “common” and site of a “meeting house” as a bold move in the boundary line dispute with Lord Baltimore. It has been continuously ...
Greens Farms Meeting House
Jennings Trail
Congregational Society of
Green's Farms established by
Connecticut General Court to
Conduct Religious and Secular
Affairs in West Parish of
Fairfield. Continuous services
Held since June 12, 1711. Present
Meeting House Dedicated 1853.
Marker is at the intersection of Hillandale Road and Church Street South, on the ...
20th Ward Meetinghouse
Formed in 1856 to accommodate rapid growth in the area, the 20th Ward originally met in a meetinghouse on 2nd Avenue between D and E streets. By 1884 when the need for a larger facility and the desire of the ...
Old Nottoway Meeting House
This is the site of the Old Nottoway Meeting House, built in 1769, the second Baptist church established south of James River. Jeremiah Walker was the first minister.
Marker is on Lewiston Plank Road (Virginia Route 723) 0.3 miles north of ...
Meeting House 1816
Religious Society of Friends
Grew from New-Wark Meeting established 1682. Present house is third in this vicinity. Friends School begun here in 1748 has operated continuously. Among 3,000 buried in yard are founders of Wilmington, John Dickinson, "Penman of the Revolution," ...