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Notable buildings include the C.H. Friend School, New Brick Warehouse (c. 1930), Planters and Merchants Bank, Halifax Cotton Mill, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company tobacco prizery, former Liggett-Meyer Tobacco Company tobacco prizery, the Parkinson Block (1899), First Presbyterian Church (1887), First Baptist Church (c. 1900), and Mt. Olive ...
Mt. Olive Baptist Church may refer to: Mount Olive Missionary Baptist Church (Mobile, Alabama), listed on the US National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) Mount Olive Missionary Baptist Church (Nassauville, Florida), NRHP-listed; Mt. Olive Baptist Church (Mullins, South Carolina), NRHP-listed
Burial ground for 30,000 Confederates killed in the siege of Petersburg (1864-1865); one of several sites claiming to have celebrated the first Memorial Day ceremony, in 1866, in the United States 5: Blandford Church: Blandford Church
Mount Olive Baptist Church (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Mt. Olivet Baptist Church .
The Mount Olive Baptist Church was built in 1855 with Greek Revival and Italianate styles. The date stone has "Mount Olive Baptist Meeting House 1855" inscribed on it. The Mount Olive Academy was built in 1837. It served as a school in the township until 1925.
The Mount Olive Baptist Church was founded in 1915 on Telegraph Road, [2] with land donated by William Wallace Chinn. [4] Agnewville was located along the main stage road out of Occoquan, Virginia. The decline of Agnewville came with the relocation of the main highway from Telegraph Road to the present day U.S. Route 1 through Woodbridge ...
St. John the Baptist Church, Saint Petersburg; St. Stanislaus Church, Saint Petersburg This page was last edited on 30 September 2022, at 07:04 (UTC). ...
[12] [13] These black churches were the first Baptist churches established in Petersburg. [7] The Gillfield Baptist Church obtained title to its land in 1818 and in 1859 completed a $7000 brick structure; the Petersburg African Baptist Church also owned its own sanctuary and the community also organized burial and other benevolent societies. [14]