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The Tinkling Spring Presbyterian Church is a Presbyterian church founded in 1740, [3] and is the oldest Presbyterian congregation in the Valley of Virginia (the Shenandoah Valley). [4] Its historic building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). The church's first building was a log structure built during 1742–1748.
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Dutch Hollow Hanger Cemetery: March 6, 2024 911 Wagon Shop Road ... Tinkling Spring Presbyterian Church: Tinkling Spring Presbyterian Church. April 11, 1973 ...
Falling Spring Presbyterian Church Manse: Falling Spring Presbyterian Church Manse: November 16, 2005 : 650 Falling Spring Rd. Glasgow: 14: Fancy Hill: Fancy Hill: September 5, 1997 : Junction of U.S. Route 11 and Falling Spring Rd.
"(Prominent Presbyterian layman who served the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. for 46 years as Secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions and as Moderator of the General Assembly in 1927)" Trinity Huntingdon
Augusta Stone Church is located on U.S. Route 11 (also known as the Lee Highway) adjacent to Fort Defiance High, Clymore Elementary, and Stuart Gordon Middle schools in the Shenandoah Valley, eight miles north of Staunton and 15 miles south of Harrisonburg in the small, unincorporated community of Fort Defiance, Virginia.
The Tinkling Spring area is the site of Tinkling Spring Presbyterian Church, founded in 1740, [8] and served by pastor Robert Lewis Dabney from 1852–1857. [9]
There, he married Naomi Thompson on January 1, 1745, in the "Valley of Virginia" with the ceremony performed by Rev. John Craig, pastor of the Tinkling Spring Presbyterian Church in Augusta County, Virginia from 1740–1764. [2] Thomas was probably a member of the Tinkling Springs Presbyterian Church. [3] [4] [5] [6]