Difference between revisions of "Churches"

From Berne, NY - a Helderberg Hilltown
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Schools in Berne
 
Schools in Berne
  
Tells the major events in the history of each church.  
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[[Image:St pauls lutheran 4.jpg|frame|right|<center>Helderberg Lutheran Church, Berne (formerly [[St. Paul's Lutheran Church]]<br>photo ca. 2003 by Barbara Husek</center>]]
  
'''Past:'''
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Since there are no records of telling us when the earliest settlers arrived at the Beaver Dam, we have to look to the early church baptism and marriage records and decide how to interpret them.
*[[Knox Sesquicentennial: The Churches]]
 
*[[Lee's Church]]
 
  
'''Present:'''
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In addition to their scant belongings, settlers brought with them their religious faiths; in the case of the Palatine settlers at the Beaver Dam, this was either Lutheran or Reformed. To attend religious services, the earliest Beaver Dam settlers traveled to Schoharie where there was both a Lutheran and a Dutch Reformed Church, or below the hill to Schenectady or Albany. It is reported that the worshipers went “twenty in a line” to Schoharie, on horseback or foot, along the ten-mile trail that followed an Indian footpath along the banks of the Foxenkill. 
*[[Lord's Acres Christian Fellowship‎‎]]
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*[[Knox Reformed Church]]
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Since most baptisms and marriages of the Beaver Dam settlers were recorded in St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Schoharie, or the Dutch Reformed Church in Schoharie, many researchers of these families assume that the participants actually lived there. In fact, many of the families seldom went to church even though their vital records are recorded there. Since communicants in the Schoharie churches lived quite distant in a wide circle around Schoharie, including Beaver Dam, they would frequently have had their religious sacraments performed by itinerant or circuit preachers who would later record them in Schoharie, or elsewhere. 
*Rock Road Chapel, on Rock Road, was organized by Pastor Jay Francis and in built in 1979. It was destroyed by fire on June 28, 2008. The chapel was rebuilt and dedicated in June, 2010.
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Family researchers also note that baptisms for the same couple may go back and forth between two or more churches of either different denominations or different locations. The explanation again is that it was probably circuit preachers doing the baptisms. The parents did not care whether - or ask whether - the preacher was Lutheran or Reformed; they just wanted the sacrament performed. It also did not matter where it was recorded - the deed was done. Many researchers think the couple moved around a lot; NOT! Up until about 1800 or so it was very common for the baptisms of some children of a Berne family to be recorded in Schoharie and other to be recorded in Berne.
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===Past Churches===
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Click on [[Churches of the past]] for the history of early churches of Berne which are gone but not forgotten, and those that were recently closed in 2009.
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===Current Churches and Religious Institutions===
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*[http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1510382035&v=wall&story_fbid=160724363942559#!/pages/Berne-NY/First-Reformed-Church-of-Berne/113472785349632/ First Reformed Church of Berne] in the [[hamlet of Berne]] was [http://www.bernehistory.org/churchDetails.asp?ID=3 founded] about 1765 as the Deutsch Reformed Church of Beaver Dam. The present building was built in 1832.
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*[http://churches.rca.org/secondberne/index.html Second Reformed Church of Berne] was [http://www.bernehistory.org/churchDetails.asp?ID=6 organized] in 1826 and is more commonly known as the Thompson's Lake Reformed Church because of its location near [[Thompson's Lake]]. The present building was built 1925 to replace an earlier one destroyed by fire the previous year.
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*[[South Berne Congregational Christian Church]] started out as the Third Christian Church, Town of Berne.
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*[[Helderberg Lutheran Church]] - was organized in 2009 by the union of [[St. Paul's Lutheran Church]] of Berne, and [[St. John's Lutheran Church]], of [[East Berne]]. The combined congregation worships in the former St. Paul's church, built in 1835 in the [[hamlet of Berne]].
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*[http://www.thecenterforwisdomandcompassion.org/ Tenzin Gyatso Institute for Wisdom and Compassion] a Buddhist retreat center operated by Rigpa.
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<gallery>
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Image:BerneDrawingChurch.jpg|<center>First Reformed Church of Berne - Drawing by Amy Pokorny - Available at the [http://www.hilltowns.org/HHAWIKI/index.php?title=Knox_-_Octagon_Barn_%26_Hilltown_Market_-_Amy_and_Russ_Pokorny Octagon Barn] </center>
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Image:H023BerneReformedchurchB.jpg|<center>First Reformed Church of Berne - Courtesy E. H. Hogan</center>
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</gallery>
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[[Category:Religion]]

Revision as of 00:15, 28 September 2012

Visit Churches for a listing of all schools in the Hilltowns.

Schools in Berne

Helderberg Lutheran Church, Berne (formerly St. Paul's Lutheran Church
photo ca. 2003 by Barbara Husek

Since there are no records of telling us when the earliest settlers arrived at the Beaver Dam, we have to look to the early church baptism and marriage records and decide how to interpret them.

In addition to their scant belongings, settlers brought with them their religious faiths; in the case of the Palatine settlers at the Beaver Dam, this was either Lutheran or Reformed. To attend religious services, the earliest Beaver Dam settlers traveled to Schoharie where there was both a Lutheran and a Dutch Reformed Church, or below the hill to Schenectady or Albany. It is reported that the worshipers went “twenty in a line” to Schoharie, on horseback or foot, along the ten-mile trail that followed an Indian footpath along the banks of the Foxenkill.

Since most baptisms and marriages of the Beaver Dam settlers were recorded in St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Schoharie, or the Dutch Reformed Church in Schoharie, many researchers of these families assume that the participants actually lived there. In fact, many of the families seldom went to church even though their vital records are recorded there. Since communicants in the Schoharie churches lived quite distant in a wide circle around Schoharie, including Beaver Dam, they would frequently have had their religious sacraments performed by itinerant or circuit preachers who would later record them in Schoharie, or elsewhere.

Family researchers also note that baptisms for the same couple may go back and forth between two or more churches of either different denominations or different locations. The explanation again is that it was probably circuit preachers doing the baptisms. The parents did not care whether - or ask whether - the preacher was Lutheran or Reformed; they just wanted the sacrament performed. It also did not matter where it was recorded - the deed was done. Many researchers think the couple moved around a lot; NOT! Up until about 1800 or so it was very common for the baptisms of some children of a Berne family to be recorded in Schoharie and other to be recorded in Berne.

Past Churches

Click on Churches of the past for the history of early churches of Berne which are gone but not forgotten, and those that were recently closed in 2009.

Current Churches and Religious Institutions