Eythorne Baptist Church originated in the meetings of early 16th century Baptists who had crossed the English Channel from the low countries to Kent to escape persecution. Nineteenth-century Baptist writer J. J. Goadby named Eythorne as one of the three "most ancient Baptist churches in England".[1]
For many years the Church had associated village chapels in east Kent. Two of these remain—at Adisham and Nonington. Others were at Eastry, Ashley, Woolage Green, Wootton and Barnsole.
^Goadby
and 9 Related for: Eythorne Baptist Church information
EythorneBaptistChurch originated in the meetings of early 16th century Baptists who had crossed the English Channel from the low countries to Kent to...
in Dover, Deal and Canterbury. EythorneBaptistChurch is more than 450 years old and one of the first Baptistchurches in the United Kingdom. Esther Copley...
Archived from the original on 21 May 2013. Retrieved 4 May 2013. "Church of St Nicholas, Eythorne". BritishListedBuildings.co.uk. Retrieved 21 March 2016. "Pembroke...
(1796–1857), a Baptist minister in Oxford, whose chapel she had already joined. They moved later to St. Helier, Jersey, then to Eythorne, Kent, but they...
included in the civil parish of Wingham. It once had a Baptist chapel, linked to the EythorneBaptistChurch "group". Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 179...
of Spain and, under the Jacobite peerage, Earl of Dundee, Viscount of Eythorne, Peer of Scotland, Knight of Saint Andrew (1705), Knight of the Order of...