Results for Bethlehem Baptist Church
Bethlehem Progressive Baptist Church
According to oral histories, Frank Saxton, a white man, bu...
Bethlehem Baptist Church
(Front text)
This church, officially organized in ...
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Congregation sas formed in 1837. Church built same year on...
St. James, Goose Creek Chapel of Ease / Bethlehem Baptist Church
Marker Front:
St. James, Goose Creek Chapel of Ease<...
Bethlehem Baptist Church
In 1828, nine people organized a Sunday school in a log sc...
Results for Bethlehem Baptist Church
Bethlehem Progressive Baptist Church
According to oral histories, Frank Saxton, a white man, built this church in 1861 for his former slaves. By 1869, 15 black Baptist churches in the state formed the Bethlehem Baptist Association. Fort Taylor Cemetery, south of Brooksville, is the ...
Bethlehem Baptist Church
(Front text)
This church, officially organized in 1868, had its origins in the antebellum Barnwell Baptist Church, which was located on this site until about 1854, when it built a new church on another lot. At that time several free ...
Bethlehem Baptist Church
Congregation sas formed in 1837. Church built same year on the Brunswick-Easton Turnpike (now Rt. 78). Abandoned in 1906.
Marker is at the intersection of Interstate 78 Frontage Road and Baptist Church Road, on the right when traveling west on Interstate ...
St. James, Goose Creek Chapel of Ease / Bethlehem Baptist Church
Marker Front:
St. James, Goose Creek Chapel of Ease
One of two chapels of ease for St. James, Goose Creek Parish stood here on the road to Moncks Corner, about 7 miles from the 1719 parish church. The chapel of ease was ...
Bethlehem Baptist Church
In 1828, nine people organized a Sunday school in a log schoolhouse, five miles from the Richmond City limits. Students from the Virginia Baptist Seminary, now the University of Richmond, helped it become the Bethlehem Baptist Church. The church received ...