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Friends Meeting House, Come-to-Good (1710), Cornwall; Horsham Friends Meeting House, West Sussex, listed Grade II; Ifield Friends Meeting House (1676), West Sussex, listed Grade I; Jordans Meeting House (1688), Buckinghamshire; Friends Meeting House, Lancaster (1708), Lancashire; Leek Quaker Meeting (1848), Staffordshire [3]
Quaker meeting houses in New York City (5 P) Pages in category "Quaker meeting houses in New York (state)" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total.
Amawalk Friends Meeting House is located on Quaker Church Road in Yorktown Heights, New York, United States. It is a timber frame structure built in the 1830s. In 1989 it and its adjoining cemetery were listed on the National Register of Historic Places .
Seaville Friends Meeting House, Seaville community, Upper Township, New Jersey, Cape May County, New Jersey, this 1716–1727 meeting house is the smallest frame Quaker meeting house in the United States. [40] Smith Clove Meetinghouse, Highland Mills, NY; Smithfield Friends Meeting House, Parsonage & Cemetery
Members of the Religious Society of Friends settled on Quaker Hill in the 1730s and sought permission to establish a meeting and build a meeting house in 1740. The first meeting house was constructed across from the present building in 1742, but as membership grew, this building became too small and in 1763, the Yearly Meeting decided to erect ...
By 1747 there were enough Quakers in Shapequaw that they began petitioning the Purchase meeting to establish their own. Permission was granted shortly thereafter, and Reynolds donated two of his acres (8,100 m 2) to the group so it could build a meeting house and burial ground. [2] The meeting house. By 1753 the meeting house was finished.
Friends Meeting House of 1697 Rawdon is also home to a Quaker meeting house built in 1697, [ 16 ] and the Trinity Church (Baptist, Methodist, United Reform). This is housed in the former Benton Congregational Church (1846), being renamed in 1972 by the three groups who now share it. [ 16 ]
The Chappaqua Friends Meeting House, built 1753, is the oldest Quaker meeting house in Westchester County, New York, a stop on the Underground Railroad and a birthplace of the abolitionist movement in New York. [1] In 1776 it would serve as a hospital for Continental Army soldiers injured at the nearby Battle of White Plains. [2]