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Karmyn Bokma The Meeting House was an Anabaptist church located in the Greater Toronto Area suburb of Oakville, Ontario . A member of the Be in Christ Church of Canada, the Canadian branch of the Brethren in Christ Church , at its height it consisted of nineteen regional sites that met mostly in cinemas, each of which had a lead pastor with a ...
Seaville Friends Meeting House, Seaville, Cape May County (This 1716–1727 meeting house is the smallest frame Quaker meeting house in the United States. [9]: 279 ) Stony Brook Meeting House and Cemetery, Princeton; Trenton Friends Meeting House, Trenton; Upper Greenwich Friends Meetinghouse, Mickleton, Gloucester County
The meeting house. By 1753 the meeting house was finished. In 1776 it would serve as a hospital for Continental Army soldiers injured at the nearby Battle of White Plains. [2] Two years later a wing was built on it. [2] The original Reynolds farm was eventually subdivided. Other farmers, like Samuel Allen and Elnathan Thorn, built houses near ...
The Town House of the small Vermont town of Marlboro was built in 1822 to be used for Town Meetings, which had previously been held in private homes. It is still in use today. Nearby is an example of a religious building called a "meeting house", the Marlboro Meeting House Congregational Church.
Timothy Bruce Cavey (born 1965), [1] known as Bruxy Cavey, is a Canadian author and former pastor.He is the author of The End of Religion and Reunion.Cavey, along with Greg Boyd, has been an important voice in recent discussions of Christian nonviolence theology in North America.
A colonial meeting house was a meeting house used by communities in colonial New England. Built using tax money, the colonial meeting house was the focal point of the community where the town's residents could discuss local issues, conduct religious worship, and engage in town business.
The Second Rindge Meetinghouse, Horsesheds and Cemetery is a historic meeting house and cemetery on Old US 202 (Main Street) and Rindge Common in Rindge, New Hampshire.Built in 1796, it is relatively distinctive in New England as one of few such meeting houses where both civic and religious functions are still accommodated, housing both the town offices and a church congregation.
On November 27, 1676, Mather's home, the meeting house, and a total of 45 buildings in the North End were destroyed by a fire. [3] The meeting house was rebuilt soon afterwards, and the Paul Revere House was later constructed on the site of the Mather House. [4] "In the eighteenth century Boston's two grandest houses were on North Square. ...