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The Brookville Reformed Church, located in Brookville, New York, is one of the oldest existing church congregations in the United States. The church was founded by 17th century Dutch settlers. During September 2006 in the midst of celebrating the church's anniversary, its safe was opened to reveal records from 1732 indicating how the Dutch ...
The Brookville Reformed Church, one of the oldest existing church congregations in the country, calls Brookville its home. The Brookville Church was founded by 17th century Dutch settlers. [5] The James Preserve is a nature preserve in Old Brookville and is the only tract of land showing the natural appearance of the village before development ...
Brookville Reformed Church: Brookville, Long Island New York: NY 1732 ... Local oral history dates the building as 1632. National Historic Landmark. [49] (Anglican ...
The Dutch Reformed Church in the American Colonies (1978) 279 pp. Fabend, H. H. Zion on the Hudson: Dutch New York and New Jersey in the Age of Revivals (2000) House, Renee S., and John W. Coakley, eds. ''Women in the History of the Reformed Church in America (1999) 182 pp. Historical Series of the Reformed Church in America. no. 5. Hansen, M.G.
Pages in category "Reformed Church in America churches in New York (state)" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Reformed Church of Bronxville was founded in 1850 in its present location, on a two-acre hill [1] above the corner of Midland Avenue and Pondfield Road in the village of Bronxville. The first church building was a smaller, New England -stye, wooden clapboard building, and was dedicated on April 9, 1850.
A new tribute to Harriet Tubman opens this weekend in Howard County. What once was a school for Black people is now a museum.
The German Reformed remained under Dutch Reformed oversight until 1793, when the German Reformed adopted their own constitution. In the 1740s, Count Nicolaus von Zinzendorf , bishop of the Moravian Church , visited Pennsylvania, with the hopes of uniting the German Lutherans and Reformed with the Moravians, which Boehm staunchly resisted.