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Results for Meeting House

Neck Meeting House

Neck or Tuckahoe Neck Meeting House was built in 1802 by members of the Society of Friends who had been Nicholites, a sect that originated in Caroline County. The building was used as a house of worship and as a ...

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Old White Meeting House and Cemetery

(Text front)

This church was established in 1696 by settlers from Dorchester, Mass., for which the town of Dorchester was named. This brick sanctuary, built ca. 1700, was occupied and then burned by British troops in 1781. The church was ...

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Meeting House Corner

Meeting House Corner

This park is the site of the first three meeting houses of the First Church of Christ, Congregational, organized in 1713. The parish of the west Division (West Hartford), the fourth in Hartford, was established in 1711. The ...

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Friends Meeting House

Flushing Freedom Mile

The Friends Meeting House was the first house of worship in the village of Flushing. It is New York City’s oldest house of worship in continuous use, and the second oldest in the nation. The house was built ...

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Quaker Meeting House

Easterly part built 1694.

Remainder built 1777. Always

used for worship except 1776-83

when occupied by British as

prison, hospital and stable.

Marker is on Northern Blvd. (New York Route 25A), on the right when traveling east.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Friends Meeting House

A Bicentennial Commemorative Site

Recognizing America's

200th Year of Liberty

Friends Meeting House

Established 1684 by

Mahlon Stacy & others

as part of Chesterfield Monthly Meeting

Building erected in 1739

Marker is at the intersection of East Hanover Street and ...

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Goose Creek Friends 1765 Meeting House

This stone meeting house served as the place of worship for Goose Creek Friends from 1765 to 1819. It has served as the residence for the caretaker of the meeting's property since that time.

Marker is on Lincoln Road (County Route ...

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Goose Creek Friends 1817 Meeting House

Goose Creek Friends meeting house was built from 1817 to 1819. Originally a two story building, it was reconstructed from 1948 to 1949 after a severe wind storm in 1943.

Marker is on Lincoln Road (County Route 722) 1.6 miles south ...

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Mt. Bethel Meeting House

Historic Baptist church and Revolutionary War burial grounds built in 1761 on the Old Quibbletown Gap Road. Chartered in 1767. Moved to the present location in 1785. One of the oldest surviving Baptist buildings in New Jersey.

A state and national ...

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Quaker Meeting House

Site acquired by Quakers in 1733. Present meeting house rebuilt with original stone in 1862.

Marker is on County Route 579, on the right when traveling west.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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