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Mount Zion Baptist Church (Martinsburg, West Virginia)

Baptist churches in West VirginiaBerkeley County, West Virginia Registered Historic Place stubsBuildings and structures in Martinsburg, West VirginiaChurches in Berkeley County, West VirginiaChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in West Virginia
National Register of Historic Places in Berkeley County, West VirginiaSouthern United States church stubsWest Virginia building and structure stubs
MOUNT ZION BAPTIST CHURCH, MARTINSBURG, BERKELEY COUNTY, WV
MOUNT ZION BAPTIST CHURCH, MARTINSBURG, BERKELEY COUNTY, WV

Mount Zion Baptist Church is a historic church on Opequon Lane in Martinsburg, West Virginia. Built during 1836–38, 35 by 40 square feet (3.3 m2 × 3.7 m2) in plan, with stonework "unequalled" in Berkeley County. As of 1980 the church was in use only about once yearly.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mount Zion Baptist Church (Martinsburg, West Virginia) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Mount Zion Baptist Church (Martinsburg, West Virginia)
County Route 9/17,

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Latitude Longitude
N 39.388611111111 ° E -77.923611111111 °
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Address

County Route 9/17
25430
West Virginia, United States
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MOUNT ZION BAPTIST CHURCH, MARTINSBURG, BERKELEY COUNTY, WV
MOUNT ZION BAPTIST CHURCH, MARTINSBURG, BERKELEY COUNTY, WV
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Leetown, West Virginia

Leetown is an unincorporated community in Jefferson County in the U.S. state of West Virginia. It lies along West Virginia Secondary Route 1 at its junction with Leetown Pike. An early historical distinction of the town is the interesting confluence of the estates of three British born, British colonial military officers who served under General Braddock and were all involved in the disastrous British operations against French and Indian forces at Fort Duquesne (modern Pittsburgh) and who later became American revolutionary officers under George Washington. The town is named for the eccentric General Charles Lee, a British officer. He was born in Cheshire in 1732 and purchased an estate in Virginia in 1776. He called the estate "Prato Rio" and the main house rests today just south of town. Major General Adam Stephen established a hunting lodge “The Bower” in 1750 one mile west of Leetown along Opequon Creek. Their mutual Revolutionary War colleague General Horatio Gates, the victor of the Battle of Saratoga, lived four miles north of town in the estate "Traveler’s Rest". St. Bartholomew’s Episcopal Church is an attractive feature of Leetown. It was consecrated in 1846 as part of the recovery of the Episcopal Church in (then) Virginia after its low ebb in the years after the Revolution. The church was badly damaged during the Civil War. The town is featured in the documentation of the general ebb and flow of forces during the Civil War. On July 3, 1864 a running battle took place through the town in which troops under Lieutenant General Jubal Early, after initial setback, prevailed over Federal forces. The victory cleared the way for Early’s entry into Maryland as part of the third and last Confederate invasion of the North, culminating in a Pyrrhic victory at Monocacy Junction near Frederick, Maryland on July 8. After the conflict, the artist David English Henderson resided in Leetown, rendering on canvas his memories as a soldier in the Army of Northern Virginia.