Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
New Jersey Alloways Creek Friends Meetinghouse, Hancock's Bridge, Salem County [9]: 281 Arney's Mount Friends Meetinghouse and Burial Ground, Burlington County [9]: 290 Atlantic City Area Monthly Meeting, Atlantic County; Barnegat Monthly Meeting, Ocean County; Cropwell Friends Meeting House, Cropwell, Burlington County
Liberty Township is a township in Warren County in the U.S. state of New Jersey.As of the 2020 United States census, the township's population was 2,670, [7] a decrease of 272 (−9.2%) from the 2010 census count of 2,942, [17] [18] which in turn reflected an increase of 177 (+6.4%) from the 2,765 counted in the 2000 census.
In 1743, Friends living near Shreve's Mount (later called Arney's Mount for an early settler, Arney Lippincott) asked the Burlington Monthly Meeting for permission to worship on the first day of each week, during the winter season, at the meeting house near Caleb Shreve's Mount. [1] [4] Some years later a meeting house was erected. The builder ...
Today, the Clarke house and Quaker meeting house are connected by trails which have existed since the early 1700s. [4] Today, the Princeton Monthly Meeting of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends holds worship services in the meeting house on First Day ("Sunday") at 9:00 & 11:00 am. [5]
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The meeting house was built in 1760 from local sandstone and expanded in 1798. It is the second oldest extent Quaker meeting house in Burlington County. The original meeting house on the site was built in 1698 behind the current building. A movable partition divides the older, eastern section from the newer section.
The Little Egg Harbor Friends Meeting House is a historic Quaker meetinghouse located at 21 E. Main Street in the borough of Tuckerton in Ocean County, New Jersey, United States. The meetinghouse was built in 1863. It was documented by the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS). [3]
The Meeting was founded in 1665 by English-speaking settlers from Rhode Island and Long Island, and the Shrewsbury meeting both the oldest Quaker meeting [2] and the oldest continuously existing religious group in New Jersey. [3] Friends held meeting for worship in their homes until the first meetinghouse was built near what is now the New ...