Results for Meeting House
Old Meeting House Common
Site of Walpole's first houses of God, Those of Reverend P...
Site of Original First Congregational Church Meetinghouse
Site of Original First Congregational Church Meetin...
The Palmer's River Meeting House
Site of "The Palmer's River Meeting House" The first meeti...
Old Yellow Meeting House
Rehoboth's second Meeting House,built in 1773,was located ...
National Historic Landmark-Old Quaker Meeting House
National Historical Landmark-Old Quaker Meeting House
<...National Historic Landmark-Race Street Meetinghouse
National Historic Landmark- Race Street Meetinghouse
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...
National Historic Landmark-First Baptist Meetinghouse
National Historic Landmark- First Baptist Meetinghouse
National Historic Landmark- Rockingham Meeting House
National Historical Landmarks-Rockingham Meeting House
...Results for Meeting House
Old Meeting House Common
Site of Walpole's first houses of God, Those of Reverend Philip Payson and Reverend George Morey, Early Harvard Graduates.
O Zion Mount of pleading, our forefathers earlier shrine. Though now shorn of crest and hillsides art thou "Auld Lang Syne" Twilight ...
Site of Original First Congregational Church Meetinghouse
Site of Original First Congregational Church Meetinghouse
1740-1775
Congregation founded 1739
Marker is at the intersection of North Granby Road and Salmon Brook Street (U.S. 202), on the right when traveling north on North Granby Road.
Courtesy hmdb.org
The Palmer's River Meeting House
Site of "The Palmer's River Meeting House" The first meeting house in the second precinct of Rehoboth. Construction started in 1717 and completed November 29th 1721, with Reverend David Turner as pastor. Fifty pounds was donated towards the cost of ...
Old Yellow Meeting House
Rehoboth's second Meeting House,built in 1773,was located in the present cemetery. It replaced the Lake St Meeting House, and was used for town meetings and church services. The site included a stable, a cemetery west of the meeting house, a ...
National Historic Landmark-Old Quaker Meeting House
National Historical Landmark-Old Quaker Meeting House
Only surviving example in New York of a typical 17th-century ecclesiastical frame building. Proportions and framing system are prime examples of the survival of medieval techniques.
Used continuously as a meeting house since 1696, except ...
National Historic Landmark-Race Street Meetinghouse
National Historic Landmark- Race Street Meetinghouse
Race Street Meetinghouse, which served as the site of the Hicksite Yearly Meeting from 1857 to 1955, was at the forefront of women's involvement both in Quaker religion and in American political activism.
Many leaders ...
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 ...
National Historic Landmark-First Baptist Meetinghouse
National Historic Landmark- First Baptist Meetinghouse
Erected 1774-75, this is an architecturally and historically notable public building. Its origins date to the establishment of the first Baptist organization in America by Roger Williams in 1638.
Courtesy National Park Service National Historic ...
National Historic Landmark- Rockingham Meeting House
National Historical Landmarks-Rockingham Meeting House
The Rockingham Meeting House is a rare 18th century New England meetinghouse of the second period type, virtually unaltered on the exterior or interior. Its barn-like massing and austere appearance evoke Medieval and Puritan forms, yet ...