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Results for Meeting House

Friends Meeting House

The Friends Meeting House in Wilmington was erected between 1815 and 1817. Like many Quaker congregations, members of the Wilmington Meeting House were active in the Underground Railroad. In 1787, Delaware passed a law prohibiting the importation and exportation ...

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Appoquinimink Friends Meeting House

The Appoquinimink Friends Meetings House, erected in 1783, is located in a community where a strong Quaker antislavery movement existed. The Meeting House is associated with John Hunn (1818-1894) and John Alston (1794-1874), two Underground Railroad "station masters" who ...

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Abyssinian Meeting House

The Abyssinian Meeting House (1828), the only documented surviving 19th century frame meetinghouse in the downtown wards of Portland, is the historical, religious, educational and cultural center of Portland's 19th century African American population. It is the earliest meetinghouse ...

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African Meeting House

The African Meeting House on Nantucket is a physical reminder of the contributions of African Americans to the history and culture of the island. The African Baptist Society constructed the building in the 1827 as a church, school, and meeting ...

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Old Town Friend's Meeting House and McKim's School

The Old Town Friends' Meeting House (also known as the Aisquith Street Meeting or Baltimore Meeting), is one of Baltimore's few remaining 18th-century buildings and the oldest religious building in the city. The Meeting House is a two-story, brick, rectangular ...

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The First Meeting House in Upper Ashuelot

The First Meeting House in Upper Ashuelot, now Keene was built on this knoll in 1736-7. Here also was located the Burying Ground of the original settlers. Erected by Ashuelot Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution in 1913

Marker is on ...

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Friends Log Meeting House

Surrounded by Burgoyne's Indian allies in 1777 but finding Friends unarmed stacked arms and attended meeting peaceably.

Marker is on Meeting House Road just east of Hoag Road, on the left when traveling east.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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First Meeting House in Hoosic Falls

Erected 1800 for the use of the "Warren Society of Hoosick" Baptist church organized in 1847.

Marker is on Main St just from Hall St, on the right when traveling south.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Site of First Quaker Meeting House

Quaker Meeting House Town of Wheatland Frame Building 1827 used until 1854 by Hicksites

Marker is on Quaker Road 0.3 miles east of Bowerman Road (County Road 716), on the right when traveling east.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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First Meeting House in Wrentham

This stone is the door-step and now marks the site of the first Meeting House in Wrentham erected in 1684 that the people might have a suitable place to attend the worship of God. Here the townsmen held their meetings ...

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