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  1. Sep 16, 2024 · Many of the earliest settlers founded sects of Protestant churches. “They come to the West, Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, but what's really popular in Ohio are Methodist, and they eventually outnumber all the other, Christian groups,” Torbett said.

    • Seventh-Day Adventist
    • Amish and Mennonites
    • Assemblies of God
    • Baptist
    • Seventh Day Baptist
    • Brethren in Christ
    • Christian Union
    • Church of Christ, Scientist
    • Congregational Christian
    • Community Churches

    Seventh-day Adventist was originally called the Milleritesafter their founder William Miller, the name was later changed to Seventh-day Adventist in 1848.

    In the 1700's Ohio, there were several orders of the Amish faith found in Ohio. They are the Old Order, New Order, Swartzentruber, Beachy, Andy Weaver, and the conservative Mennonites and the Amish...

    In 1905 T. K. Leonard, a pastor in Findlay, received the Pentecostal message and the experience, and became a pioneer for the movement in Ohio. The Assemblies of Godhas always considered itself a “...

    "In January of 1790 in a block house near what is now Cincinnati, nine earnest men and women organized this Baptist Church. The land was given by one Major Sites and he united with the church the n...

    In 1789, a very small group of Seventh Day Baptistsfrom Westerly, Rhode Island, settled at Marietta, Ohio; and in 1806 another small group settled in Mahoning County, Ohio.

    The beginnings of the Brethren In Christ Churchpoint back to Upper Switzerland, and to various scattered groups of earnest sincere Christians in Europe, who began to state their spiritual convictio...

    Christian Union was officially organized on the third day of February 3, 1864, in Columbus, Ohio. Rev. J. F. Given, the publisher of the Christian Union Witness, Rev. J. F. Given and Dr. J. V. B. F...

    As far as can be determined, Christian Science was first introduced in Ohio in 1885 when Gen. Erastus N. Bates came to Cleveland and set up an office in the downtown business section to practice Ch...

    In 1796 the First Congregational Church in the Territory was organized in Marietta on a community basis, welcoming all denominations into membership. Daniel Story was the minister, and Mrs. Mary Bi...

    Central Community Church of Columbus was organized in the Old Canal Hotel on February 6, 1843. On December 17 1843 the congregation was please to announce the dedication of a new church building. T...

  2. Sep 24, 2017 · The Buckeye State early brought together several concentra- tions of Roman Catholics. Early and late, diverse communities of Jews also settled there, both in smaller towns as well as in Cincinnati, Columbus, and Cleveland.

  3. Jul 23, 2020 · "Documenting religious pluralism in Ohio and the impact faith communities have had on the state, Religion in Ohio encompasses the historical experiences of many groups. Each chapter is the story of one of those communities written by a member of that faith or denomination."

  4. Jun 3, 2024 · By the 1820s, Columbus, Cincinnati, Marietta and most of the other towns in Ohio had Presbyterian churches. Beginning in the 1830s, the Presbyterian Church divided over the issue of slavery with Northern and Southern branches, both present in Ohio through the Civil War.

    • Elizabeth Woods
    • 800 E. 17th Ave, Columbus, 43211, Ohio
    • 2019
  5. Jun 3, 2024 · The Society of Friends, also known as the Quakers, settled in eastern and southern Ohio in the late 1700s and early 1800s. They established Mt. Pleasant, Alliance, Salem, and Lisbon in addition to several other communities across the state. The first Quaker to arrive in Ohio was George Harlan in 1795.

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  7. Jun 28, 2024 · When the Shaker movement reached its peak in the mid-19 th century, there were believed to be between 2,000-4,000 Shaker believers living across 18 major settlements and numerous smaller communities. This peak in popularity coincided with the Era of Manifestations , also known as Mother Ann’s work.

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