Cumberland Presbyterian Church (disambiguation)

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Cumberland Presbyterian Church may refer to:

Cumberland Presbyterian Church Protestant Christian religious denomination

The Cumberland Presbyterian Church is a Presbyterian Christian denomination spawned by the Second Great Awakening. In 2015, it had 70,810 members and 709 congregations, of which 51 were located outside of the United States. The word Cumberland comes from the Cumberland River valley where the church was founded.

or to specific churches within it, including:

in the United States

(by state then city)

Cumberland Presbyterian Church (Clarendon, Arkansas)

The Cumberland Presbyterian Church is a historic church building at 120 Washington Street in Clarendon, Arkansas. It is a modest two-story wood frame structure with Greek Revival features. It was built in 1869 for a congregation organized in 1857. The entire town of Clarendon was destroyed during the American Civil War, and this was one of the first churches built thereafter. The congregation merged with the First Presbyterian Church in 1920, and the building was taken over by the local Masonic lodge, which used it for its own purposes as well as a community meeting center, and also the local library for a time. In 1968 it was rescued from proposed demolition and given to the local Boy Scout organization.

Mount Olive Cumberland Presbyterian Church

Mount Olive Cumberland Presbyterian Church is one of the oldest existing congregations west of the Mississippi River and its historic church building at the junction of Izard County Roads 12 and 18 in Mount Olive, Arkansas is listed with the National Register of Historic Places. The pastor is Rev. Christopher S. Anderson.

Caney Springs Cumberland Presbyterian Church

Caney Springs Cumberland Presbyterian Church is a historic church at the junction of Arkansas Highway 289 and Izard County Road 70, near Sage, Arkansas. It is a modest rectangular Plain Traditional structure set on fieldstone piers and topped by a gabled corrugated metal roof. The interior has a single large room, with plank flooring and flush-boarded walls. The pews, original to the building's 1889 construction, were handcrafted by the congregation. The church is a well-preserved example of a once-common type of church found in the region.

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