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Wooden churches in West Virginia (1 C, 8 P) Pages in category "Wooden churches in the United States" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
Ancient wooden church architecture developed under the influence of stone architecture, defense and residential buildings. Already in the pre-Mongol period there were various solutions for the volume and construction of churches, such as square log churches and double log churches with a separate square log choir.
St. Joseph's Catholic Church (Mountain Island, North Carolina) St. Paul's Roman Catholic Church (New Bern, North Carolina) Skewarkey Primitive Baptist Church; Snow Creek Methodist Church and Burying Ground; Spring Green Primitive Baptist Church
Old Judy Church, also known as Old Log Church, is a historic Methodist Episcopal church building located near Petersburg, Pendleton County, West Virginia. It was built between 1836 and '38, and is a rectangular hewn-log building measuring 24 feet wide and 28 feet deep. It was abandoned in 1910 and rededicated in 1936 by a local Methodist ...
Due to land use regulations, the church building was relocated and used for a local theatre group to put on plays. [2] After the removal of the log-cabin church building, construction on a new church at the site began in 1972. [2] The stained glass windows and log pews of the former church building were salvaged and installed in the new church. [2]
It is the oldest Episcopal church congregation in West Virginia. rear view from graveyard. In 1741 Morgan Morgan, one of West Virginia's earliest settlers, built the original log church on this site, about halfway between his cabin and the mill. Soon a cemetery was established.
Andrews Chapel, also known as the McIntosh Log Church, is a historic Methodist church building in McIntosh, Alabama. It is one of only a few remaining log churches in the state. It had its beginning in 1860 when John C. Rush and his wife donated land for the church to the Methodist McIntosh community. The church was built before the year ended.
The Oquossoc Log Church (Oquossoc Union Church) is a historic non-denominational church on Maine State Route 4 in the Oquossoc village of Rangeley, Maine. Built in 1916, it is a unique structure, whose walls and major interior fixtures are all built out of spruce logs. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1]