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Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church

Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Complex
Flatbush DRC PM winter jeh.jpg
(2013)
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Complex is located in New York City
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Complex
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Complex is located in New York
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Complex
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Complex is located in the US
Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Complex
Location 890 Flatbush Ave.Brooklyn, New York City
Coordinates 40°39′0″N 73°57′33″W / 40.65000°N 73.95917°W / 40.65000; -73.95917Coordinates: 40°39′0″N 73°57′33″W / 40.65000°N 73.95917°W / 40.65000; -73.95917
Area 2 acres (0.81 ha)
Built Church: 1793-98
Parsonage: 1853
Church House: 1923-24
Architect Church: Thomas Fardon
Church House: Meyer & Mathieu
Architectural style Church: Federal
Parsonage: Greek Revival / Italianate
Church House: Colonial Revival
NRHP reference # 83001690
Significant dates
Added to NRHP September 8, 1983
Designated NYCL May 15, 1966
January 9, 1979 (expansion)

The Flatbush Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, also known as the Flatbush Reformed Church, is a historic Dutch Reformed church – now a member of the Reformed Church in America – at 890 Flatbush Avenue in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City. The church complex consists of the church, cemetery, parsonage and church house.

H.P. Lovecraft mentions the complex in passing in his story "The Horror at Red Hook", speaking of its "iron-railed yard of Netherlandish gravestones". The Church House and grounds are featured in season 2 of the Hulu TV series The Path, where they are used as the Meyerists' New York City headquarters.

The congregation was founded in 1654 and the first church on the site built at the order of Peter Stuyvesant. The 2.5-story stone Federal style church building designed by Thomas Fardon was constructed in 1793-98 and is the third church building on the site. It features a stone tower with stone belfry. The stained glass windows are by Tiffany studios and commemorate the descendants of many early settlers of Flatbush. The building was constructed of Manhattan schist, and the architecture includes Romanesque features such as arched windows and doors, as well as Tuscan colonettes. The church's bell was imported from Holland, and paid for by John Vanderbilt.

The bodies of American soldiers who died in the Battle of Long Island during the American War are reportedly buried underneath the church structure.


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