United Methodist Church may refer to:
Denominations:
Individual churches: (by location)
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The African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church and Connection, usually called "the A.U.M.P. Church," is a Methodist denomination. It was chartered by Peter Spencer (1782–1843) in Wilmington, Delaware, in 1813 as the "Union Church of Africans," where it became known as the "African Union Church".
Highland is a broad term for an elevated mountainous plateau.
Church of Christ may refer to:
The proper noun Free Church may refer to:
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Bethel AME Church, Greater Bethel AME Church or Union Bethel AME Church may refer to:
Batavia may refer to:
First United Methodist Church may refer to:
Old Stone Church may refer to:
St. Stanislaus Church or St. Stanislaus Catholic Church or variants thereof, may refer to:
John Morgan Walden was an American Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He also gained notability as a newspaper editor and journalist, as a State Superintendent of Education in Kansas, as an officer in the Union Army, and as an Official in his Christian denomination.
Methodism is a Protestant Christian movement encompassing numerous denominations.
The Methodist Church may refer to one of a number of denominations of Methodism, some of which included a national description in the title, including:
Trinity Methodist Church may refer to:
Union Church may refer to:
Bethel Methodist Church or Bethel Methodist Episcopal Church or Old Bethel Methodist Church may refer to:
The Methodist Episcopal Church was the first Methodist denomination founded in the United States.
First Methodist Episcopal Church, or variations with , South or and Parsonage, may refer to:
First Methodist Church or variations with Building may refer to:
The Wesleyan Church is a Christian holiness movement church headquartered in the United States.
Frank Orlando Weary was an architect based in Akron, Ohio. He joined in the partnership Weary & Kramer with George W. Kramer. Weary designed the Carroll County Courthouse in Carrollton, Ohio in Second Empire style, which was recognized by listing on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. He also designed the Akron Public Library (1904), a Carnegie library, also listed on the National Register. His brother Edwin D. Weary was also an architect, known for designing bank buildings in Chicago and partnering with W. H. Alford at Weary and Alford.