Results for Presbyterian Church
Site of the First Presbyterian Church of Beaver County Pennsylva
The congregation was served by supply ministers from 1784 ...
Bennettsville Presbyterian Church
Marker Front:
This church was founded in 1855 by nin...
Hartwood Presbyterian Church
The Writing on the Wall
This is Hartwood Presbyteria...
New Market Presbyterian Church
Mary Miller deeded land in 1849 to serve both Methodist an...
Sardis Presbyterian Church & Cemetery
The first residence of missionaries sent in 1821 to establ...
First Presbyterian Church
Dedicated Jan. 1, 1867
This Carpenter Gothic Churc...
Historic New York Avenue Presbyterian Church
This church, one of the Nation’s most historic, traces its...
Site of Willington Presbyterian Church
Organized by the Rev. Moses Waddel, 1809
Joined Syno...
Mt. Paran Presbyterian Church and Cemetery
Mt. Paran Church was incorporated September 18, 1841. The ...
Bethesda Presbyterian Church
(Side A)
This church, which held services as ...
Results for Presbyterian Church
Site of the First Presbyterian Church of Beaver County Pennsylva
The congregation was served by supply ministers from 1784 until the coming of George M. Scott on Sept 14, 1799 he served Mill Creek Church for 40 years and rests in this burial ground
Marker is on Old Mill Creek Church ...
Bennettsville Presbyterian Church
Marker Front:
This church was founded in 1855 by nine members of the Great Pee Dee Presbyterian Church, 5 mi. SE. Rev. Pierpont E. Bishop was its first permanent minister. The first church, a frame building, was dedicated in 1855. Elder ...
Hartwood Presbyterian Church
The Writing on the Wall
This is Hartwood Presbyterian Church, which Federal troops occupied during the Civil War. They removed and burned all the woodwork, leaving only the bare plaster walls. On November 24, 1862, Capt. George Johnson, 3rd Pennsylvania Cavalry, ...
New Market Presbyterian Church
Mary Miller deeded land in 1849 to serve both Methodist and Cumberland Presbyterian congregations. The original building burned and the Methodists in 1882 sold their interest in a second building. This second church destroyed by a tornado in 1884. Present ...
Sardis Presbyterian Church & Cemetery
The first residence of missionaries sent in 1821 to establish the Turnip Mountain Mission to the Cherokees was located on this site, just north of the Cemetery wall. The mission, later known as Haweis, was built two miles to the ...
First Presbyterian Church
Dedicated Jan. 1, 1867
This Carpenter Gothic Church was built at a cost of $12,000.
It is listed as No. 301 of the American Presbyterian & Reformed Historic Sites.
Marker is on South C Street (Nevada Route 341), on the ...
Historic New York Avenue Presbyterian Church
This church, one of the Nation’s most historic, traces its beginnings to a small group of Scottish stonemasons meeting in a carpenter’s shop on the grounds of the White House during its construction in 1793.
Many prominent Americans, including 17 ...
Site of Willington Presbyterian Church
Organized by the Rev. Moses Waddel, 1809
Joined Synod of the Carolinas, 1813
Building Collapsed, July 2, 1939
Pastors
Rev. Moses Waddel, D.D.,
1809-1819, 1830-1836
Rev. R.B. Cater 1820-1826
Rev. Aaron Foster 1828
Rev. Isaac Waddel 1837-1838
Rev. W.H. Davis 1839-1862; 1867-1869
Rev. J.O. Lindsay 1863-1866; 1884-1889
Rev. T.H. Law 1870
Rev. ...
Mt. Paran Presbyterian Church and Cemetery
Mt. Paran Church was incorporated September 18, 1841. The chruch was called Soldier’s Delight prior to 1841 and that congregation began circa 1776. The oldest legible tombstone is that of Robert Gilchrist, dated October 17, 1767. The oldest known deed ...
Bethesda Presbyterian Church
(Side A)
This church, which held services as early as 1760 about 1 mi. E, gave its name to a Scots-Irish community in this area before the Revolution. It was formally organized in 1769 by Rev. William Richardson. In 1771 John ...