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Results for Chapel of Ease

Chapel of Ease

To St. Helena's Church, Beaufort, S.C. Built about 1740. Made a separate church after the revolution. Burned by forest fire Feb. 22, 1886.

Marker is on Lands End Road (South Carolina Route 45), on the left when traveling south.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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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 ...

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Ruins of Pon Pon Chapel of Ease

St. Bartholomew’s Parish

1706 Parish Established

Rev. Nathaniel Osborn, Missionary of the S.P.G. arrived

1715 Parish devastated by Yemassee, Indians

1725 Act of General Assembly provided for a Chapel of Ease here to be used as a Parish Church until one should be built

1737 ...

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Zion Chapel of Ease and Cemetery

A Chapel of St. Luke's Parrish,

established May 23, 1767, built of

wood shortly after 1786 under the

direction of Captain John Stoney

and Isaac Fripp, was consecrated

in 1833. Members of the Barksdale,

Baynard, Chaplin, Davant, Fripp,

Kirk, Mathews, Pope, Stoney, and

Webb families worshiped here. ...

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Chapel of Ease Old Trinity Episcopal Church

Circa 1707

In the selection of the middle point between the Atlantic Ocean and the Chesapeake Bay for the start of the Mason-Dixon Line survey, this area was the center of a long controversy among British, Maryland and Pennsylvania officials as ...

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Site of Chapel-of-Ease

To St. Mary Anne’s Church, North Elk Parish, North East, Maryland. Built in 1733, the oldest remaining gravestone in 1968 records the death of Thomas Shepherd, August 28, 1742.

Marker is on Dr. Jack Road 0.3 miles from Jacob Tome Memorial ...

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