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Tates Creek Baptist Church

1783 establishments in Virginia1851 establishments in Kentucky19th-century Baptist churches in the United StatesBaptist churches in KentuckyChurches completed in 1851
Churches in Madison County, KentuckyChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in KentuckyGreek Revival church buildings in KentuckyNational Register of Historic Places in Madison County, KentuckySouthern Baptist Convention churches

The Tates Creek Baptist Church is a Baptist church organized in 1783. In May 1775 the first recorded religious service took place in Fort Boonesborough. It met in a stone building around Shallow Ford until it burned down around 1850. The current building was finished in 1851. Several members of the congregation were delegates to a convention held in September 1786 regarding separating Kentucky from Virginia. Tates Creek Baptist Church is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Tates Creek Baptist Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Tates Creek Baptist Church
Boonesborough Road, Richmond

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Wikipedia: Tates Creek Baptist ChurchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.846944444444 ° E -84.318333333333 °
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Address

Tates Creek Baptist Church

Boonesborough Road 1225
40475 Richmond
Kentucky, United States
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Phone number

call(859)6234096

Website
tatescreekbaptist.com

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Nearby Places

Boone Creek Rural Historic District

Boone Creek Rural Historic District, about 11 miles southeast of Lexington, Kentucky, is a 4,060 acres (16.4 km2) historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994. It included 88 contributing buildings, 55 contributing structures, and 25 contributing sites. The district spans the border between western Clark County and eastern Fayette County. It is roughly bounded by Interstate 75, Cleveland Rd., Athens-Boonesboro Rd. and Grimes Rd. It includes three places already separately listed on the National Register: Cleveland-Rogers House Grimes House and Mill Complex James Pettit's Mill It is described in its NRHP nomination as "a distinctive blend of natural and human-made landscapes which reflects a different development pattern from that found in other sections of Fayette County. The district includes a density of historic farmsteads and early-to-late-nineteenth century features whose spatial organization is very influenced by the desiccated landforms around it. This contrasts with the rest of rural Fayette County, which has been more intensively developed, especially for horse farms, and is much more regular topographically. The quality of the Boone Creek Rural Historic District is still good despite the number of buildings considered non-contributing by virtue of their modern construction dates. Of the non-contributing buildings, 38 are modern barns and 45 are modern dwellings. The new development in the district tends to perpetuate the traditional patterns in land use, choice of building sites, and scale."