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Shiloh House is a historic house at 1300 Shiloh Boulevard in Zion, Illinois. John Alexander Dowie , the founder of Zion, built the house in 1902–03; he lived there until his death in 1907. Architect Paul Burkhardt of Chicago , who worked on many of Zion's early buildings, designed the home.
Shiloh House may refer to: Shiloh House (Sulphur Springs, Arkansas), listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in Benton County; Shiloh House (Zion, Illinois), NRHP-listed in Lake County; Shiloh House (Benton Harbor, Michigan), NRHP-listed in Berrien County; Shiloh Youth Revival Centers, a 1970's Jesus People communal movement ...
Shiloh House is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story Queen Anne building constructed of cement blocks. It is composed of a main section in the front and two equally sized sections to the rear, connected to the main section with covered archways. It has a hip roof, round turrets, and a center porch able topped with a dome and finial.
The Shiloh House is a historic house at 700 Lodge Dr. in Sulphur Springs, Benton County, Arkansas. Built in 1927, it is one of the largest examples of Bungalow and Craftsman -style architecture in Benton County.
The Shiloh Youth Revival Centers movement was the largest Jesus People communal movement in the United States in the 1970s. Founded in 1968 as a small communal house (House of Miracles) by Lonnie Frisbee and John Higgins, a former drug addict who had converted to fundamentalist Christianity by reading the Bible, in Costa Mesa, California, [1] the movement quickly grew to a very large movement ...
The House of Miracles was the group from which sprang the largest (and one of the longest lasting) of the Jesus People communal groups, the Shiloh Youth Revival Centers, which had 100,000 members and 175 communal houses spread across the United States and Canada during its lifespan.
Shiloh Communities, Shiloh Trust, and Shiloh Church, one of the oldest continuously-operating communes in the United States, in Sulphur Springs, Arkansas; Shiloh Meeting House and Cemetery, Ireland, Indiana, NRHP-listed in Dubois County; Shiloh Primitive Baptist Church, NRHP-listed in Johnston County, North Carolina, near Brogden, North Carolina
Shiloh Communities was founded by Rev. Eugene E. Crosby Monroe in Sherman, New York, in 1942. It was a religious commune for rehabilitating WWII veterans, and the commune supported itself with proceeds from an organic food business, bakery, farm, ranch, and day care school, which were organized under an umbrella corporation named Shiloh Trust.