Beekman Meeting House and Friends' Cemetery is located on Emans Road in LaGrangeville, New York, United States. The meeting house is a wooden building from the early 19th century that has been unused and vacant for decades. As a result, it is in an advanced state of decay, and mostly collapsed. The cemetery, better preserved, is located a short distance away.
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| - Beekman Meeting House and Friends' Cemetery (en)
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| - Beekman Meeting House and Friends' Cemetery is located on Emans Road in LaGrangeville, New York, United States. The meeting house is a wooden building from the early 19th century that has been unused and vacant for decades. As a result, it is in an advanced state of decay, and mostly collapsed. The cemetery, better preserved, is located a short distance away. (en)
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| - Beekman Meeting House (en)
- and Friends' Cemetery (en)
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| - Beekman Meeting House (en)
- and Friends' Cemetery (en)
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| - A section of house in a wooded area. Its roof has mostly collapsed and an interior wall is visible. (en)
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| - Ruins of house, 2008 (en)
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| - Emans Rd., LaGrangeville (en)
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| - 41.63361111111111 -73.76638888888888
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| - Beekman Meeting House and Friends' Cemetery is located on Emans Road in LaGrangeville, New York, United States. The meeting house is a wooden building from the early 19th century that has been unused and vacant for decades. As a result, it is in an advanced state of decay, and mostly collapsed. The cemetery, better preserved, is located a short distance away. The meeting house was built in 1809 for a meeting that split off from another one in the nearby hamlet of Oswego. After the Hicksite-Orthodox schism in 1828, it was one of only two meetings in the county to embrace Orthodox Quakerism. After that meeting dissolved in the early 20th century, it was for a time a Grange hall. It and its nearby cemetery were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. (en)
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| - POINT(-73.766387939453 41.633609771729)
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