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Presbytery of Redstone







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Presbytery of Redstone
Logo of the Presbytery of Redstone
ClassificationPresbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
RegionWestmoreland, Fayette, Somerset, and Cambria Counties (modern)
HeadquartersGreensburg, Pennsylvania
OriginSeptember 19, 1781[1]
Pigeon Creek, Pennsylvania[1]
Official websitehttp://www.redstonepresbytery.org/

The Presbytery of Redstone is a Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) governing congregations in Westmoreland, Fayette, Somerset, and Cambria Counties in Western Pennsylvania.[2] Its headquarters are located in Greensburg, Pennsylvania.[2] It governs 67 congregations and 8,249 total congregants (2022).[3]

HISTORY

The Presbytery of Redstone is currently part of the Synod of the Trinity, however it was originally part of the Synod of New York and Philadephia. It was organized on September 19, 1781 by the Synod of New York and Philadelphia. While the current territory of the presbytery consists of four counties in the southwestern Pennsylvania, originally it stretched from the Allegheny Mountains to the east, as far north as Lake Erie, to the south to Virginia and “on the west by the setting sun.”. Redstone would have originally included all of the following present-day Presbyteries, Redstone Kiskiminetas, Pittsburgh, Washington, Beaver-Butler, Shenango, Lake Erie, Upper Ohio Valley, and West Virginia. The first meeting of the Presbyterian Church in Mount Pleasant PA, originally named Mount Pleasant Presbyterian Church, occurred in 1772, when the Rev. David McClure met with a group of settlers to worship God at the current church site, then known as Jacob’s Swamp. In 1776, the Rev. Dr. James Power, then 31 years old, brought his wife and four young daughters across the Alleghenies on horseback (with only three horses) to become the minister of Middle Presbyterian Church and the first ordained minister of any denomination to settle with a family in Western Pennsylvania. The first meeting of the presbytery on Sept. 19, 1781 was held at Pigeon Creek Church instead of Laurel Hill as originally planned because the incursions of Native Americans rendered it undesirable for the ministers and elders to go to Laurel Hill. Six persons attended the first meeting - Rev. John McMillan, Rev James Power and Rev. Thaddeus Dodd. Elders, John Neal, Demas Lindley and Patrick Scott. John Neal was an Elder and founding member of Mount Pleasant Presbyterian Church (now called Middle Presbyterian Church of Mount Pleasant). John Neal is the brother of Robert Neal who built the historic Neal Log house which sits in Schenley Park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neill_Log_House). [1][2][4][5]

Counties in the Presbytery of Redstone, shown in blue. Counties in the Synod of the Trinity shown in red.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Redstone Presbytery" (PDF). Redstone Presbytery. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 July 2011.
  • ^ a b c "Welcome to the Presbytery of Redstone". Presbytery of Redstone.
  • ^ https://church-trends.pcusa.org/presbytery/420560/overview/
  • ^ Barnett, John M.; John Meloy; Ebenezer Finley (1889). History of the Presbytery of Redstone. Washington, Pennsylvania: Observer Book and Job Print.
  • ^ Smith, Joseph (1854). Old Redstone or, Historical Sketches of Western Presbyterianism. Lippincott, Granbo & Co.

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  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Presbytery_of_Redstone&oldid=1229098263"

    Categories: 
    History of Pennsylvania
    Presbyterian organizations established in the 18th century
    Presbyterian Church (USA) presbyteries
    Religious organizations established in 1781
    1781 establishments in Pennsylvania
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