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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
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 "Quaker City" settlement is one of the earliest resettlements of Quakers into the Massachusetts Colony following their expulsion by the Puritans in the 17th century. Friends Meeting house is a brick, two-story house with a rectangular gabled roof at 479 Quaker Hwy. [3]
[a] The Merion Friends Meeting House is the only surviving meeting house constructed before 1700. [3] Thirty-two surviving Pennsylvania meeting houses were constructed before 1800, and are listed individually on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) or as contributing properties in historic districts . [ 4 ]
In 1665 Quakers established a meeting in Shrewsbury, New Jersey (now Monmouth County), and built a meeting house in 1672 that was visited by George Fox in the same year. [46] They were able to establish thriving communities in the Delaware Valley, although they continued to experience persecution in some areas, such as New England.
Quaker Meeting may refer to: Monthly meeting, the basic unit of administration in the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) Meeting for worship, a Quaker religious practice comparable to a church service; Quaker meeting (game) Quaker Meeting (Quakertown, New Jersey), a historic district
Lewes Friends Meeting House is a Religious Society of Friends (Quaker) place of worship in the town of Lewes, part of the district of the same name in East Sussex, England.A Quaker community became established in the town in 1655 when George Fox, prominent Dissenter and founder of the Religious Society of Friends, first visited.
Old Town Friends' Meetinghouse, also known as Aisquith Street Meeting or Baltimore Meeting, is a historic Quaker meeting house located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a two-story brick building which has undergone several alterations over the years.