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Mt. Olivet Baptist Church is a historic church in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. Charles T. Walker served as pastor. [1] Rev. O. Clay Maxwell served as pastor. Richetta Randolph Wallace under him. The church building was constructed in 1907 for Temple Israel. It was purchased in 1925 and became the home for Mt. Olivet's ...
Mount Olivet Baptist Church or Mt. Olivet Baptist Church may be: Mt. Olivet Baptist Church (Portland, Oregon) Mt. Olivet Baptist Church (Harlem, New York) See also
Grave of Rev. J. Andrew Bowler. John Andrew Bowler (March 1, 1862 – October 7, 1935) was an American educator and Baptist minister. [1] He was the first minister of the Mt. Olivet Baptist Church in Richmond, Virginia and was one of the organizers for the first school for African Americans in Church Hill. [2]
Before 1860, David G. Lett was pastor at the city's leading Black Baptist church, Zoar Church. In March 1860, about 40 parishioners left that church to form Zion Baptist Church led by Jesse Freeman Boulden, with Rev Tansbury leading the old body. Tansbury returned to his previous home in Canada and on December 22, 1861, the two churches ...
Richard DeBaptiste (November 11, 1831 – April 21, 1901) was a Baptist minister in Chicago, Illinois.Before the abolition of slavery, he was an abolitionist and worked with his close relative, George DeBaptiste in the Underground Railroad, mainly in Detroit, Michigan.
Mt. Olivet Baptist Church in Portland, Oregon is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is at 1734 NE 1st Avenue and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on February 23, 2022.
Mt. Olive Baptist Church is a historic Baptist church located at 301 Church Street in Mullins, Marion County, South Carolina.It was built between 1922 and 1926, and is a one-story, Late Gothic Revival style brick cruciform building.
The Mount Olivet cemetery adjacent to the church is part of the original land deeded in trust in 1854. On March 12, 1855, John B. Brown and his wife Cornelia, and William Marcy and his wife Ann, resolved an ownership dispute over the church site property by each deeding that property in trust for a Methodist Protestant Church meetinghouse and burial ground.