Graceham Moravian Church and Parsonage
{{short description|Historic church in Maryland, United States}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}
{{Infobox NRHP
| name = Graceham Moravian Church and Parsonage
| nrhp_type =
| image = GracehamMoravianChGracehamMD-2.jpg
| caption = July 14, 1996
| nearest_city = Thurmont, Maryland
| coordinates = {{coord|39|36|59|N|77|22|43|W|display=inline,title}}
| locmapin = Maryland#USA
| built = {{Start date|1749}}
| added = May 13, 1976
| area = {{convert|15|acre}}
| refnum = 76000995{{NRISref|version=2010a}}
}}
Graceham Moravian Church and Parsonage is a historic church building and parsonage located at 8231 Rocky Ridge Road, MD 77 in Graceham, east of Thurmont, Frederick County, Maryland. It is a two-story Flemish bond brick church built in 1822, and covered with white stucco because of deteriorated masonry. The church was built as an addition to the adjacent meeting house and parsonage built in 1797. This building and the church's cemetery having uniform flat gravestones (called God's Acre by the Moravians) represents Maryland's only remaining 18th century Moravian settlement.
History
The Moravian Church originated in Bohemia and Moravia in the 1400s, with the first Moravians settling in North America in the 1700s. The first Moravian settlements were in Pennsylvania, but Moravians began to move south to Maryland, Virginia, and Salem, North Carolina. The Moravians who settled in Maryland were one of the groups to move south during the mid-1700s, travelling from Pennsylvania to Maryland via an Indian road.{{cite web|url=https://mht.maryland.gov/secure/medusa/PDF/NR_PDFs/NR-372.pdf |title=National Register of Historic Places Registration: Graceham Moravian Church and Parsonage|date=May 1975|accessdate=2016-01-01 |author=George J. Andreve|publisher=Maryland Historical Trust}}
The Graceham congregation was formally organized by Bishop Matthaeus Gottfried Hehl on October 8, 1758, as "Manakosy" (Monocacy) Moravian Church.{{Cite journal|last=Oerter|first=A. L.|date=1913|title=Graceham, Frederick County, Md. AN HISTORICAL SKETCH|journal=Transactions of the Moravian Historical Society|volume=9, No. 3/4|issue=3/4|pages=119–305|jstor=41179664}} Their first place of worship, a Gemeinhaus (English: "congregation house"), had been constructed in 1749. A second church edifice was dedicated on October 16, 1773, before being replaced by the current edifice that was dedicated on October 27, 1822.Provincial Elders Conference of the Moravian Church in North America, Congregations Book [MSS.], vol. 1, p. 31, preserved at the [https://www.moravianchurcharchives.org Moravian Archives, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania]. The official name change of the village took place in 1785, following the recommendation of Johannes von Watteville, who wrote (transl.), "May this village be a hamlet, or little town of the Lord's, in which grace abides, with simplicity and a childlike spirit,"{{Cite journal|last=Oerter|first=A. L.|date=1913|title=Graceham, Frederick County, Md. AN HISTORICAL SKETCH|journal=Transactions of the Moravian Historical Society|volume=9, No. 3/4|issue=3/4|pages=156|jstor=41179664}} hence the name Graceham.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.
Gallery
File:GracehamMoravianChGracehamMD.jpg
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Graceham Moravian Church and Parsonage}}
- {{MHT url|id=374|title=Graceham Moravian Church, Frederick County}}, including photo from 2006, at Maryland Historical Trust
{{National Register of Historic Places in Maryland}}
Category:Churches in Frederick County, Maryland
Category:Czech-American culture in Maryland
Category:History of the America (North) Province of the Moravian Church
Category:Moravian churches in the United States
Category:Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in Maryland
Category:National Register of Historic Places in Frederick County, Maryland
Category:Pennsylvania Dutch culture in Maryland
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