Clear Creek Meeting House

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Clear_Creek_Meeting_House an entity of type: Thing

The Clear Creek Meeting House is a Friends meeting house located at 14365 N. 350th Ave., southeast of McNabb, in Magnolia Township, Putnam County, Illinois. The meeting house was built in 1875 to house the Illinois Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, also known as the Quakers. The Yearly Meeting was the westernmost annual meeting of the Hicksite Friends and attracted followers from several states. The meeting house also hosted the Clear Creek Monthly Meeting, which was attended by local Quakers. The building is typical of American Friends meeting houses; it features two square rooms with plain features both outside and inside. The lack of ornamentation was designed to reflect the Quaker tenet of simplicity. The meeting house is one of the few surviving western Quaker meetin rdf:langString
rdf:langString Clear Creek Meeting House
rdf:langString Clear Creek Meeting House
rdf:langString Clear Creek Meeting House
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xsd:integer 48902481
xsd:integer 1089859211
xsd:date 1992-11-05
rdf:langString Building Committee, Clear Creek Mtg.
xsd:integer 14365
rdf:langString Illinois#USA
xsd:integer 92001534
xsd:string 41.154444444444444 -89.19333333333333
rdf:langString The Clear Creek Meeting House is a Friends meeting house located at 14365 N. 350th Ave., southeast of McNabb, in Magnolia Township, Putnam County, Illinois. The meeting house was built in 1875 to house the Illinois Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends, also known as the Quakers. The Yearly Meeting was the westernmost annual meeting of the Hicksite Friends and attracted followers from several states. The meeting house also hosted the Clear Creek Monthly Meeting, which was attended by local Quakers. The building is typical of American Friends meeting houses; it features two square rooms with plain features both outside and inside. The lack of ornamentation was designed to reflect the Quaker tenet of simplicity. The meeting house is one of the few surviving western Quaker meeting houses which represent this tradition of Quaker architecture. The meeting house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 5, 1992.
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xsd:gYear 1875
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