First Parish Church in Plymouth
First Parish Church in Plymouth is a historic Unitarian Universalist church at the base of Burial Hill on the town square off Leyden Street in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Founded in 1620 by the Pilgrims in Plymouth, it is the oldest church congregation in the United States in continuous operation.
History
Congregation
The congregation was founded in the English community of Scrooby in 1606 by the Pilgrims, a group of Protestant Christians. After they emigrated to North America in 1620, the Separatist congregation established a church in Plymouth which became a parish church of Massachusetts' Congregationalist state church. Eventually, a schism developed at the turn of the 19th century, when much of the congregation adopted Unitarianism along with many of the other state churches in Massachusetts. All state churches were disaffiliated with the government by 1834.[1] The congregation is currently affiliated with the Unitarian Universalist Association and has 80 members as of 2011.[2]
Buildings
Originally, the congregation held Christian services on the Mayflower and then at a fort on Burial Hill from 1621 until 1648. The fort was also used for other colony events including meetings of the Plymouth General Court. In 1648 the first of four church buildings on the town square was constructed. Later churches were built in 1684, 1744, and 1831. Hartwell, Richardson & Driver designed the current Romanesque-style building, completed 1899, which replaced the 1831 wooden Gothic structure.[3] The 1899 building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.
Images
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Burial Hill Fort, ca. 1621, housed the original church in Plymouth
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William Harlow House in Plymouth MA.jpg
William Harlow House, built in 1677 in Plymouth, made of timbers from the Burial Hill Fort, (meeting place of First Parish Church)
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1683 First Parish Meeting House in Plymouth MA.jpg
1683 First Parish Meeting House
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1744 First Parish Meeting House in Plymouth MA.jpg
1744 First Parish Meeting House
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Plymouth Meeting House 1831.JPG
1831 First Parish Meeting House
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PlymouthMA TownSq 1910.jpg
First Parish Church in Town Square, ca. 1905
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Plimoth Plantation fort and meeting house.jpg
recreation of Plymouth's fort/first church meeting house at Plimoth Plantation
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Plymouth House in Shichigahama, Japan, a sister city of Plymouth, modeling after the recreated First Parish Church in Plimoth Plantation
See also
- First Parish Church (Duxbury, Massachusetts)
- Oldest churches in the United States
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Plymouth County, Massachusetts
References
- ↑ Paul Erasmus Lauer, Church and state in New England (Johns Hopkins Press, 1892)pg. 105-107 [1] (accessed September 20, 2009)
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Baker, James. A Guide to Historic Plymouth. Charleston: History, 2008. ISBN 1-59629-228-8, ISBN 978-1-59629-228-4.
External links
- First Parish website
- The historical records for the First Parish Church in Plymouth are in the Andover-Harvard Theological Library at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
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- Pages with broken file links
- Churches completed in 1899
- 19th-century Unitarian Universalist church buildings
- Unitarian Universalist churches in Massachusetts
- Plymouth Colony
- Protestant congregations established in the 17th century
- Buildings and structures in Plymouth, Massachusetts
- Churches in Plymouth County, Massachusetts
- National Register of Historic Places in Plymouth County, Massachusetts
- Properties of religious function on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts