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The Mt. Zion congregation was organized in 1870, the same year that the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church was formed as a new denomination by African Americans who had been members of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. In its early years, the congregation worshiped in a frame church in Union City's African-American neighborhood. By the ...
Mt. Zion Christian Church, Richmond, Kentucky; Mount Zion Church and Cemetery (Hallsville, Missouri), listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in Boone County; Mount Zion Brick Church, Barada, Nebraska, listed on the NRHP in Richardson County; Mount Zion Church (Big Sandy, Tennessee), once listed on the NRHP in Benton County
Mount Zion Baptist Church Stained glass. 1872 – A small group of Black Athenians gather for religious services at the home of Joseph and Henrietta Miller. 1876 – Services held in a wood-framed single-room church on Lancaster Street. 1885 – Baptisms take place in the Hocking River before the new church building is constructed.
Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church and Mount Zion Cemetery is a historic church and cemetery located at 172 Garwin Road in Woolwich Township, New Jersey, United States. The church was a stop on the Greenwich Line of the Underground Railroad through South Jersey operated by Harriet Tubman for 10 years.
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The Mount Zion Church was a historic church building near Big Sandy, Tennessee, USA. It was a hewn log structure built in either 1812 [2] or 1845 [1] and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. It was removed from the National Register in 2012. [1]
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