Broad Creek Friends Cemetery (Quaker)
The history of the Broad Creek Friends meeting and its related burial ground is a bit tough to track. The meetinghouse was a small frame building and was removed from the site in 1968....
Genealogy and History of the East Coast
The history of the Broad Creek Friends meeting and its related burial ground is a bit tough to track. The meetinghouse was a small frame building and was removed from the site in 1968....
The cemetery for Deer Creek Friends lies beside the meeting house, surrounded by a fence. 1212 Main St., Darlington, MD Findagrave Listings
An earlier Friends burial ground was established on Sharon Road, but at some point those graves were moved to the current location. The meetinghouse was removed many years ago but the burial ground remains,...
The Cemetery for the Little Falls Friends meeting lies behind the meetinghouse. 719 Old Fallston Road, Fallston, MD Findagrave Listings
Little Falls was established about 1738 under Gunpowder Monthly meeting. After Broad Creek meeting was established, the two preparative meetings were joined to form Little Falls Monthly. The preparative groups were laid down in...
Initially started as an Orthodox branch of the West Nottingham meeting, Colora’s burial ground was established several years after the meeting house was built. Prior to then, the meeting used the older West Nottngham...
Generally known as the Brick Meetinghouse burial ground, the East Nottingham Friends cemetery lies to the east of the venerable old building. It is sometimes confused with the Rosebank Cemetery which lies on the...
Sometimes referred to as the Preston family cemetery, the old Octoraro cemetery is at the edge of a residential area. At some point in history, there was a meetinghouse located here as well. Ragan...
Also referred to as the Harrisville Quaker cemetery, the West Nottingham Friends cemetery lies to the east of the old brick meeting house. Harrisville Road, south of Nesbitt Lane [Note – mapping programs have...
Colora Meeting was initially established as an Orthodox meeting, branching from the original West Nothingham meeting and was established as a meeting in 1828. Their meeting house was built in 1841 on land given...
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