「Meetinghouse」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)
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nightsville, Utah, which he equipped with a | meetinghouse, amusement hall, and school instead of the |
In about 1841 the Saints built a | meetinghouse in Ramus, which may have been the first mee |
gational church was organized in 1736 and a | meetinghouse constructed on the Green in 1740. |
mble beginnings the church grew and built a | meetinghouse in 1862, one of the earliest of such meetin |
a library, offices, limited parking, and a | Meetinghouse space. |
members that it was able to buy land for a | meetinghouse the following year, the exact site of which |
nd chapels, a Buddhist centre, as well as a | meetinghouse for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da |
l Church (The Church-on-the-Hill or Acworth | Meetinghouse) is a historic church at the end of the tow |
Moorestown Friends School and | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker school and meetinghous |
First Congregational Church and | Meetinghouse (Church of Christ; Townshend Church) is a h |
e of worship; in many cases, the associated | Meetinghouse has a distinctive style of architecture, re |
ican Army sniper while on roadblock duty at | Meetinghouse Street, Strabane. |
the intersections of Calvert Road and Brick | Meetinghouse Road (near the intersection of 272 and 273) |
ect of Basil Bunting's poem “At Briggflatts | meetinghouse” (1975) . |
Guilford Center | Meetinghouse (Guilford Center Universalist Church) is a |
icent Bellevue State Park, the 19th Century | meetinghouse has been restored to include the warmth of |
de Princeton Monthly Meeting's 17th century | Meetinghouse and historic burial ground. |
in trust for a Methodist Protestant Church | meetinghouse and burial ground. |
Stirling LDS Church | meetinghouse, 1905 |
s, three Christian Churches, one LDS Church | meetinghouse, and a Garden centre in the south portion o |
ongregational Church) is an historic church | meetinghouse at 1803 Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge, |
The Colora | Meetinghouse was listed on the National Register of Hist |
The Colora | Meetinghouse is a historic Friends meeting house located |
t was built in about 1831 as a conventional | meetinghouse in the Federal style. |
The current | meetinghouse was built around 1699-1700. |
The building replaced an earlier | meetinghouse built in 1773. |
It was built in the style of a New England | meetinghouse, rare in Georgia. |
The temple was built next to an existing | meetinghouse about twenty miles (32 km) southwest of Nas |
Home plate faces | Meetinghouse Road. |
The Little Falls | Meetinghouse was listed on the National Register of Hist |
The Little Falls | Meetinghouse is a historic Friends meeting house located |
ox, a young minister in 1854 when the first | meetinghouse was built, named the church after the Mount |
It is the fourth | meetinghouse since 1647 to be located on what was the or |
Bingham Free | Meetinghouse is a historic meeting house on South Main S |
The members of the Birmingham Friends | Meetinghouse, a few hundred yards north, joined the Hick |
The Friends | Meetinghouse is an historic Friends Meeting House of the |
Portsmouth Friends | Meetinghouse, Parsonage, and Cemetery (also known as Por |
Sandy Spring Friends | Meetinghouse |
FRIENDS | MEETINGHOUSE, S of Uxbridge on MA 146, 1770-1776. |
The Race Street Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic and still active Quaker meeti |
Hockessin Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house on DE 27 |
East Blackstone Friends | Meetinghouse (also known as "Mendon Lower Meeting" or "S |
Upper Greenwich Friends | Meetinghouse (Mickleton Friends Meetinghouse) is a histo |
The Amesbury Friends | Meetinghouse is a Friends Meeting House in Amesbury, Mas |
Camden Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house on Comme |
Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house in Casco |
Concord Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic meeting house on Old Concord |
Appoquinimink Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house on Main |
Deer Creek Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Friends meeting house located |
Mill Creek Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house in Newar |
Boston Common, Boston; Race Street Friends | Meetinghouse, Philadelphia |
The Great Friends | Meetinghouse in Newport, Rhode Island, held the annual m |
Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic meeting house in Dover, New J |
Arney's Mount Friends | Meetinghouse and Burial Ground is a historic Quaker meet |
ouse and Mill Site, East Nottingham Friends | Meetinghouse, Joshua Lowe House, Thomas Richards House, |
t Camden and is buried there in the Friends | Meetinghouse Cemetery, along with his wife and parents. |
Catawissa Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house at South |
The South River Friends | Meetinghouse, or Quaker Meeting House, is a historic Fri |
The Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house in James |
Long Plain Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker church at 1341 N. Main |
Radnor Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house on Sprou |
Pembroke Friends | Meetinghouse is an historic Quaker church at Washington |
American abolitionist, belonged to Friends | Meetinghouse, and worked with the Underground railroad a |
Plymouth Friends | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house at the c |
Bradford Friends | Meetinghouse (Marshallton Meeting House) is a historic Q |
ne of the historic buildings is the Friends | Meetinghouse which is at the northern terminus of Route |
sites along this road including the Friends | Meetinghouse, which is on the National Historic Register |
es Chapel (formerly Asheboro Street Friends | Meetinghouse), and several local architectural landmarks |
Old Town Friends' | Meetinghouse was listed on the National Register of Hist |
Old Town Friends' | Meetinghouse, also known as Aisquith Street Meeting or B |
The Quaker (Society of Friends) | Meetinghouse was built in 1704 and was added to the Nati |
The Great | Meetinghouse is the only Third Haven Monthly Meeting to |
Hancock's | Meetinghouse is home to Paul Revere's #236 bell, which c |
Harpswell | Meetinghouse is a building started in 1757 for use as a |
Chestnut Hill | Meetinghouse (also known as South Parish Meeting House) |
Pomfret Town House is an historic | meetinghouse on Town House Road in Pomfret, Connecticut. |
om Deerfield because of the distance to its | meetinghouse, in addition to religious differences with |
tained possession of the Temple Lot and its | meetinghouse, Fetting's organization met in members' hom |
gelical Congregational Church" and sold its | meetinghouse to Harvard Historical Society. |
ow Kraybill Campus) founded in the Kraybill | Meetinghouse with grades 1-10 in cooperation with Lancas |
s also the site of a stake center, a larger | meetinghouse for the members of The Church of Jesus Chri |
Mennonite | Meetinghouse (Germantown Mennonite Church) is a historic |
erly retired bishop met at the Summit Mills | meetinghouse, even though Beachy had previously announce |
married February 15, 1815 in the Moorestown | Meetinghouse. |
ayed their games on a pitch behind a Mormon | meetinghouse, which had originally been the MUFC reserve |
A Morrisite | meetinghouse in Race Track, Powell County, Montana with |
A new | meetinghouse went up in 1901, said to be the largest in |
East Nottingham | Meetinghouse, or Brick Meetinghouse, is a historic Frien |
The West Nottingham | Meetinghouse, or Little Brick Meetinghouse, is a histori |
The West Nottingham | Meetinghouse was listed on the National Register of Hist |
Oblique view of | Meetinghouse |
The Orthodox | Meetinghouse was built in a more modern or "classical" s |
Orthodox | Meetinghouse (Birmingham Orthodox Meeting House) is a hi |
th Deerfield nevertheless dedicated its own | meetinghouse in 1821. |
The Frying Pan | Meetinghouse (also known as Frying Pan Old School Baptis |
The Presbury | Meetinghouse was listed on the National Register of Hist |
The Presbury | Meetinghouse is a historic Methodist church located at A |
so started her own (as the show's producer, | Meetinghouse Productions Inc., (which also produces Worl |
the Methodist Church in Belmont Row, Quaker | Meetinghouse near Lady Well, and the Baptist Chapel in B |
It is the oldest Quaker | meetinghouse in Massachusetts and the third oldest in th |
structure was built in 1836 as a religious | meetinghouse by the United Brethren, a group of breakawa |
River | Meetinghouse is a historic church on U.S. 201 in Vassalb |
The Saylesville | Meetinghouse is an historic meetinghouse on Smithfield A |
f the sanctuary he had built for the second | meetinghouse of the First Baptist Church as "Brown's Chu |
regation persevered and built another small | meetinghouse on the site in 1870. |
The original stone | meetinghouse was built in 1836 and is believed to be Ith |
ut 1849 and is a modestly scaled, one story | meetinghouse building with a mortise and tenon timber fr |
Benson Lossing documented that | meetinghouse and a few other buildings when he visited t |
That | meetinghouse was the site of fighting during the Battle |
ioners, who prevented him from entering the | meetinghouse, although the Whig committee of Groton publ |
The | meetinghouse, at 1515 Cherry Street, served as the site |
The | Meetinghouse is part of the Friends Center campus, which |
The | meetinghouse is located at 120 Friend Street. |
The | meetinghouse is a few hundred feet from the amphitheater |
The | meetinghouse still hosts an active Quaker congregation, |
Behind the | meetinghouse is a town park with a pond and a playground |
From 1851 to 1962, the | meetinghouse hosted the Salem Quarterly meeting. |
The | meetinghouse is constructed of clay tiles with a brick v |
There is a large cemetery behind the | meetinghouse, with many eighteenth-century stones. |
hich completely destroyed the interior, the | meetinghouse was rebuilt and enlarged in 1788. |
out 1,500 people came to his funeral at the | meetinghouse in January, 1871 where Lucretia Mott spoke. |
The | meetinghouse has hosted visitors including Lucretia Mott |
The | meetinghouse was built in 1841 and added to the National |
The | meetinghouse was built in 1769 and served as the meeting |
Today the | Meetinghouse is owned by the Pembroke Historical Society |
rently meet on the former men's side of the | meetinghouse, and the women's side is only used for larg |
is an eighteenth-century farmhouse near the | meetinghouse, and another nearer the rest of the school, |
The cornerstone on the | meetinghouse reads 1697, although only the northwest cor |
ounded American soldiers took refuge in the | meetinghouse. |
They disrupted services at the | meetinghouse on July 22, 1781, captured Dr. Mather and 2 |
The | meetinghouse was designated a National Historic Landmark |
The school stayed at the | Meetinghouse for five years, expanding by a grade a year |
s and contains the 1804 bell from the third | meetinghouse. |
Third | Meetinghouse is an historic meeting house and Grange Hal |
Women's Movement were associated with this | meetinghouse; these included abolitionist and women's ri |
This | meetinghouse was used by local Quakers from 1706 until 1 |
Union | Meetinghouse (The Old Meeting House; East Montpelier Cen |
Mercer Union | Meetinghouse is a historic church on Main Street, 1/10 m |
r grave-bank a little east of the Unitarian | meetinghouse by some persons while digging away and remo |
Fremont is noted for an unspoiled | meetinghouse, built in 1800, and today listed on the Nat |
Uwchlan | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house on N. Vi |
was the construction of the Twentieth Ward | meetinghouse on 21st Street in Ogden during the depths o |
Warrington | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house on PA 74 |
York | Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house at 134 W |
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