The Old Parsonage Museum in Fraserburg is the first parsonage that the , the local congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK), built for its pastor, five years after the congregation's founding in 1851. It has for many years housed the local museum and is one of three national heritage sites in the Karoo town. Its restoration around 1979 was the largest of several projects in the region carried out around that time, including that of the Peperbus, a former Anglican church and gunpowder magazine.
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| - Old Parsonage Museum, Fraserburg (en)
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| - The Old Parsonage Museum in Fraserburg is the first parsonage that the , the local congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK), built for its pastor, five years after the congregation's founding in 1851. It has for many years housed the local museum and is one of three national heritage sites in the Karoo town. Its restoration around 1979 was the largest of several projects in the region carried out around that time, including that of the Peperbus, a former Anglican church and gunpowder magazine. (en)
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| - The Old Parsonage Museum in Fraserburg is the first parsonage that the , the local congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa (NGK), built for its pastor, five years after the congregation's founding in 1851. It has for many years housed the local museum and is one of three national heritage sites in the Karoo town. Its restoration around 1979 was the largest of several projects in the region carried out around that time, including that of the Peperbus, a former Anglican church and gunpowder magazine. The building was completed at the beginning of 1856 by . The plan was approved by the church council, but the Rev. (invested here in 1854) had a major role in the design, including metric rather than English-measured doors. During the planning of the restoration, research in the Cape Church archives and other local sources uncovered much information about the building's history. (en)
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