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Manchester University Archives and Brethren Historical Collection |
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Full listing > Accession BC2015/10Accession # | BC2015/10 | Topic | Church of the Brethren History | Title | History of Stonelick and Four Mile Congregations | Location | Archives' Network [W:] in folder titled [Church of the Brethren]. Printed copies of "The Virginia Colony" IS, COB General Filing Cabinets - South/Central District Congregations - 1 copy under "Four Mile" along with an earlier edition identified as BC2002/10 | Citation | History of Stonelick and Four Mile Congregations, BC2015/10, Archives and Brethren Historical Collection, Funderburg Library, Manchester University, North Manchester, Indiana. | Access | Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status of archived materials where this is relevant to their intended use of the materials. | Provenance | Merle Rummel, Pastor Four mile Church, MC Class of 1956 | Scope and Content | Historian, pastor, and MC alumnus, Merle Rummel's extensive COB research, including: Stonelick, Brethren Migration Roads, history of the Four Mile congregation, journals of Nancy Lybrook and Elizabeth Miller, the frontier Brethren of Kentucky, and the Virginia Colony. Many families and names are included. | Date of Accession | 29 September 2015 | Bio History Note | Excerpts from Pastor Merle C. Rummel's extensive research and lists of family and church members: Obannon Creek/Stonelick Church was the first German Baptist Brethren (COB) congregation north of the Ohio River and probably the oldest existing church west of the Appalachians. It was founded in 1795. "There were three early Dunker settlements inClermont County, Ohio. The earliest was Obannon Creek on the Warren County line, off the Little Miami River, where the Bowmans and Millers were original settlers. The Bowmans lived north in Warren Co. Two of these earliest Millers,David and Daniel, lived south of Goshen, at the corner of Goshen Road and the Woodville Pike (Daniel was the first local minister installed at the Obannon Church). Both brothers had to move north to the Dayton area. This was the Virginia Military District, the lands were given as payment to Revolutionary Veterans, sales of these lands in the East pushed the original settlers from their homesteads (soon after 1800)."
| Archivist Note | Description prepared 29 September 2015 by Jeanine M. Wine |
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