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Salem Baptist Church Logansport KY c. 1986-1988. The founding of Salem Baptist Church was a result of the Second Great Awakening.Between 1830 and 1910 the number of Baptist churches in Kentucky tripled, from 574 to 1,774 and church membership increased five-fold from 39,975 to 224,237. [1]
Crestwood, Kentucky: Long Run Baptist Church and Cemetery: built NRHP-listed Eastwood, Kentucky: First Baptist Church (Elizabethtown, Kentucky) built NRHP-listed Elizabethtown, Kentucky: Bethel Baptist Church (Fairview, Kentucky) built NRHP-listed Fairview, Kentucky: First Baptist Church (Frankfort, Kentucky) built 1868 201 Saint Clair Street
First Free Will Baptist Church (Ossipee, New Hampshire) First Free Will Baptist Church and Vestry; First Free Will Baptist Church in Meredith; First Freewill Baptist Church (East Alton, New Hampshire) First Missionary Baptist Church (Little Rock, Arkansas) First Old School Baptist Church of Roxbury and Vega Cemetery; Florona Grange No. 540 Hall
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Worshipers pray against the backdrop of the Blue Ridge Mountains at Salem Free Will Baptist Church on Sunday, October 6, 2024 in Old Fort, N.C. Congregants pray at the First Baptist Church in ...
Baptist History and Heritage Society. ISBN 978-1-57843-006-2. Leo T. Crismon, ed. (1975). Baptists In Kentucky, 1776–1976: A Bicentennial Volume. Middletown: Kentucky Baptist Historical Society. Ira V. Birdwhistell (1985). Baptists of the Bluegrass: A History of Elkhorn Baptist Association, 1785–1985. Berea, KY: Berea College Press.
Steve Guttenberg hit the ground running to help people impacted by the fires in Pacific Palisades — and he was almost unrecognizable. The flames first began around 10:30 a.m. local time on ...
Charles began his first pastorate in 1923 at Cliff Side Baptist Church in Cliff Side, North Carolina. During his tenure there he led the church in the building of a new building. Then on December 1, 1925, Charles accepted the call to be pastor in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, at Salem Baptist Church. He stayed about three years at Salem Baptist.