Port Medway Meeting House - Port Medway, Nova Scotia
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 44° 07.532 W 064° 34.003
20T E 374654 N 4887008
Built in 1832 by a Baptist congregation organized in 1825, over the years this meeting house also served Wesleyan and United Church of Canada congregations.
Waymark Code: WMP709
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
Date Posted: 07/11/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member veritas vita
Views: 2

Owned by the Free Will Baptist church from 1832 to 1865, it was sold that year to the Wesleyan Methodist Church. With Church Union in Canada, this meeting house became a United Church. It is one of the few meeting house style religious buildings left in Nova Scotia.

It's not known when last the meeting house held religious services. In 1988 it was declared a Provincial Heritage Property and is currently under the care of the Port Medway Heritage Society.

This sign, relating a glimpse into the building's history, is mounted on the front wall of the meeting house.

Meeting House
1832


This meeting house was built in 1832 by the Free Will Baptists of Port Medway. In 1865 it had been sold to the Wesleyan Methodist Church (later the United Church of Canada). In 1988, after 156 years as a place of worship, it was declared a Provincial Heritage Property and is currently in the care of the Port Medway Heritage Society.
Port Medway Meeting House

DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE
The Port Medway Meeting House is a small, domestic-like wood framed building, erected in 1832 by the Port Medway Free Will Baptist congregation. It is located at the mouth of the Port Medway River in Port Medway, NS. Both the land and the building are included in the Provincial designation

HERITAGE VALUE
The Port Medway Meeting House is valued for its age; as one of only a handful of small meeting houses left in Nova Scotia; for its continuous use as a place of worship; and for its relatively unaltered interior and exterior.

The Free Will Baptists of Port Medway organized a congregation in 1825 and had a formal meeting house built by 1832. Free Will Baptists evolved from the Congregational New Lights movement of the late eighteenth century in New England, brought to Nova Scotia by immigrants from New England. The Port Medway Meeting House was used by the local Free Will Baptist congregation until 1865 when it was sold to the Wesleyan Methodist Church, which became the United Church of Canada in 1925.

The Port Medway Meeting House is a relatively unchanged simple wood famed building with a domestic exterior appearance, one of only a few unaltered meeting houses in the province. The interior arrangement of the pews, whereby they face out from the walls and are parallel to the central aisle is a unique feature of the Port Medway Meeting House.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS
Character-defining elements of the Port Medway Meeting House relate to its relatively unaltered appearance and include:
- simple, unadorned façade;
- original pews arranged facing out from walls and parallel to central aisle;
- locally made and original iron work;
- gable roof;
- wood frame;
- wooden siding.
From Historic Places Canada
The "Official Tourism" URL link to the attraction: [Web Link]

Hours of Operation:
Unknown
Ostensibly the meeting house now houses a museum which appears to be closed at present.


Admission Prices:
Free


Approximate amount of time needed to fully experience the attraction: Less than 15 minutes

Transportation options to the attraction: Personal Vehicle Only

The attraction’s own URL: Not listed

Visit Instructions:

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Recent Visits/Logs:
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Lynx Humble visited Port Medway Meeting House - Port Medway, Nova Scotia 09/22/2018 Lynx Humble visited it