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Free Will Baptist Church of Auburn

Free Will Baptist Church Of Auburn
Free Will Baptist Church of Auburn.jpg
Front and western side of the church
Free Will Baptist Church of Auburn is located in Ohio
Free Will Baptist Church of Auburn
Free Will Baptist Church of Auburn is located in the US
Free Will Baptist Church of Auburn
Location 11742 E. Washington St., Auburn Corners, Ohio
Coordinates 41°23′15″N 81°13′8″W / 41.38750°N 81.21889°W / 41.38750; -81.21889Coordinates: 41°23′15″N 81°13′8″W / 41.38750°N 81.21889°W / 41.38750; -81.21889
Area Less than 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built 1839 (1839)
Architectural style Greek Revival
NRHP Reference # 76001430
Added to NRHP May 28, 1976

The Auburn Free Will Baptist Church is a historic former Baptist church building in Auburn Township, Geauga County, Ohio, United States. Constructed in the second quarter of the nineteenth century, it is no longer home to the congregation that built it, but it remains a significant component of the area's built environment, and it has been named a historic site.

The Auburn Free Will Baptist Church was formed in 1839 or 1840, led by an Elder Miller as the first pastor. The congregation was able to build a church building by the end of 1840, but forty years later the congregation remained weak enough that they were forced to share their pastor with another church. Before the building was finished, the church often worshipped in a schoolhouse or in a barn belonging to farmer Richard Slitor. After its construction, it was used both by Baptists and by the Methodists for most of the rest of the century, and the Baptists continued worshipping in it until the era of the Second World War.

Built with clapboarded walls on a foundation of sandstone, the church is most distinctive for its roofline and the roof's structural support. From the outside, the roof resembles an ordinary gable roof, but an unusual system of trusses and diagonal bracing supports the underside of the roof. Local historians have deemed this construction style particularly rare in the Connecticut Western Reserve. With this exception, it is typical of the region's vernacular Greek Revival churches; three windows appear on the sides and on the second story of the front, while the main entrance is centered between a window on each side of the front's first floor. A tower once sat atop the front of the building.


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