DELMARVA PLACES 0F WORSHIP
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An Account of Old Worship
Houses in 1968
From the 1638 Olde Swedes
Heliga Trifaldighets Kyrka, In New Castle County on the
Delaware, to the 1742 Hungers Episcopal Church of Virginia's
Eastern Shore, is right near 500 miles
and full of anciant chuches.
This is an account of them .
Ashbury Methodist Church ,
Wilmington, dedicated 1789 by the Bishop Francis Ashbury,
which in it's cemetery lies
the Revolutionary War hero Allen McLane. Close by is the 1740
Park
Drive Presbyterian Church,
now the home of Delaware Colonial Dames. At East Seventh Street is
Old Swedes, know also as
Heliha Trefaldighes Kyrka, or, Holy Trinity Chuch of 1699 built
by Swedish Lutherans and consecrated Trinity Sunday, June 4, 1699.
South to New Castle Towne,
overlooking a 'Greens which was the site of a 1672 log fort , is the
1706 Immanuel Church. At Second Street is the 1707 Old
Presbyterian Church , bult when the town
of New Castle was a port of
immigration, visited by new Americans to give thanks for the safe
voyage.
To the west in Maryland on
Old Post Road, at Calvert Cross Roads, is a 1724 Brick Meeting
House which William Smallwood , an officer of the Continentals of
the Revolution , once used as a hospital.
At Cooch's Bridge, is
Welsh Tract Bapist Church , founded in 1701 by a congregation of 16
formed in Wales and came
as group to settled a 40,000 acre William Penn Grant. Here
Washington and Cornwallis troops 'did' battle in 1777.
St. Mary Anne's Episcopal
Church, North East, Maryland, built in 1742 when The Church
of England was the
Established Church of Maryland. The church yard has grave markers of
early Indian converts.
Old St. Ann's Episcopal
Church, 1768, Middletown, Delaware. The inerior has original
Box Pews and Palladien
window. Out side are a 200 year Oak Tree, boxwood and ivy brought
from England.
Old Bohemia, or St.
Francis Xavier Jusuit Church . Founded in 1704 as one of the
earlist
Catholic establishments in
the English Colonies. Located at Warwick, Maryland, two miles down
a country road.
At Kennedysville, Maryland
is Shrewsbury Episcopal Church, an 1832 church,
At Chestertown is the
Emmanuel Episcopal , established 1772, where the conference of
1780 accepted the name '
Protestant Episcopal Church' to relpace 'The Church of England' in
the
Provinces.
Near Langford, Maryland is
St. Pauls Episcopal Church, built 1713, at the cost of 70,000
pounds of tobacco.
St. Lukes Episcopal Church
in Church Hill, Maryland, a 1732 church, distinguished by the
tone of its bricks, a semi
circular apse and gambrel roof and lettered panels on each side of
the
Chancel.
The Old Wye Church, built
1721, restored 1854, again in 1949.
Near Cordova , Maryland,
stands St. Joseph's Catholic whice celebrated it's bicentennal
in 1965. The old church was
a Jesuit mission established by Father Joseph Mosley which he built
a brick chapel and dwelling
in 1782, under one roof to evade the law against public places of
worship for Catholics.
Old Third Haven Friends
Meeting , in Easton, built in 1682, with timbers hewn with a broad
axe, and said to be the oldest frame building dedicated to
religious meetings still existing in America.
Old Trinity Episcopal at
Church Creek, Maryland, which has been traced to before 1690, is
one of the oldest
Protestant churches now in use. The recent restoration followed
many years of
research and the
accomulation of 'old pine' for the interior . The church yard has
the graves of the
Carroll Family, including
that of Anna Ella Carroll, a good friend, advisor and ghost
writer for
Abraham Lincoln.
Old Green Hill Episcopal
Church on the way to Salisbury, route 352, dated 1733, is the
only remains of a early port of entry. It's brick wall, brick
floor, high back family pews and a clerks
desk are original.
Spring Hill Episcopal
Church, dates from 1733, west of Salisbury, has orignal and
natural wood panelling.
At Snow Hill we find All
Hallows Episcopal, built in 1748 for 120,000 pouds of tobacco.
It is of soft hued brick
with distinctive windows rising to the eves.
Manokin Presbyterian, 1785
at Princess Anne, Maryland.
St. Andrews Episcopal
Church, also in Princess Anne, built in 1770.
At Hopewell, just below
Princess Anne, is St. Peters Church built in 1850, where 'The
Methodist Preacher of the Islands” of the Chesapeake Bay, preached
his first sermon.
At Rehoboth on the Pocomoke
River is the Rehoboth Church, the first Presbyterian Church
in America, built in 1706,
and except for some window changes, the brck walls remain as they
were laid. In the churchyard at the site of the 1740 Coventry
Episcopal, now in ruins across the road, is a bell hanging between
two trees , thought to be a gift from Queen Anne.
St. James Episcopal Church
at Accomack, a Basilican type building with four fluted Dorie
columns erected in 1828.
Also here in town is the Mackemie Presbyterian built in 1838 .
At Pungoteague is St
Georges Episcopal Church of 1738.
Hungers Episcopal Church
which dates to 1742 . After the Revolution the church was descrated
and the lead from the organs pipes was used to make weights for fish
nets. The church was
restored in 1851.
In Eastville, Virginia is
Christ Episcopal Church built in 1826, but dates to 1614.
Eastville, has the oldest standing courthouse in
America
Old St. Martins, at
Showell, Maryland, brick built in 1859, which is shuttered but has
service
once a year in June.
Blackwater Presbyterian at
Clarksville, Delaware, organized in 1667 by William Tunnel.
Prince Georges Chapel in
Dagsboro, built 1757, still has its original pine interior.
At Broad Creek is Christ
Church , a frame structure built in 1771 has its original unpainted
'heart of pine' interior
which remains in perfect condition.
In the Indian River
Hundred, Delaware's Sussex County, is St. Georges Episcopal Church
with an orgional Palladian window, origional box pews, galleries
with curved stairs and hand rails built in 1794.
Barratts Chapel,
Frederica, Delaware, built in 1780, known as the Cradel of Methodism
in
America.
Christ Episcopal Church,
Dover, Delaware whose brick structure dates from 1734, and remins
the Nave of the Episcopal Church of Delaware. Here is buried a
Delaware signer of the Declaration of Independence, Caeser Rodney.
Old Union Methodist south
of Odessa bilt in 1847. In Odessa is the Appoquinimink Friends
Meeting House, said to be the smallest brick house of worship in
America dated to 1785.
North of Odessa, Old
Drawyers Presbyterian , built in 1773.
SOURCE: Friday, July 12,
1968, Philadelphia Inquirer
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