Category: Chester County Churches
There are a number of older United Church of Christ and Reformed churches in Chester County. Brownback.s United Church of Christ Founded in 1743 640 Ridge Road, Spring City, PA 19475 610-495-6789 Church Website...
There are quite a few Baptist Churches in Chester County. Quite a few of them have a very long history. The map below shows the locations of some of these Baptist churches within the...
In Chester County, there are a number of old Catholic Churches, as shown on the map below. St Joseph Catholic St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church absorbed the parish of St. Stanislaus Kostka in...
Chester County is home to many Episcopal churches, some of them very old. Church of the Advent Church of the Advent Episcopalian parish was founded in 1882, with their first church being erected...
Chester County has a number of very old Lutheran churches. The first to be established was Zion Lutheran in 1743. Advent Lutheran 1601 Green Lane, West Chester, PA 610-436-0807 Church Website St. Michael’s Lutheran...
There are many Methodist churches in Chester County. Atglen Methodist (AKA Asbury Community United Methodist Church) Penningtonville Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in 1853 in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Penningtonville became a borough...
Chester County has many Presbyterian churches, the earliest of which was The Great Valley church in Tredyffrin township, established in 1710. The map below shows the locations of the churches within Chester County. ...
A meeting for worship was first established at Birmingham under the care of Concord meeting in 1704. In 1726/27, a preparative meeting was set up and both meetings were transferred to Birmingham Monthly meeting...
Bradford Monthly Meeting had its beginning in 1719 when a meeting for worship was established for the winter here known as “Brandywine Forks” or simply “Forks” by Kennett Monthly Meeting. In 1737, Chester Quarterly...
The Downingtown Friends meeting started out in Lionville as Uwchlan Monthly Meeting in 1712, first meeting in member’s home and finally building a stone meeting house in 1756 (see Uwchlan Meetinghouse). In 1784, members...