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St. John's Episcopal Church, Zion Parish

St. John's Episcopal Church, Zion Parish
St, johns zion parish from cemetery.jpg
Basic information
Location 11040 Baltimore Ave
Greenbelt, Maryland 20705
Geographic coordinates 39°2′5.5″N 76°54′30″W / 39.034861°N 76.90833°W / 39.034861; -76.90833Coordinates: 39°2′5.5″N 76°54′30″W / 39.034861°N 76.90833°W / 39.034861; -76.90833
Affiliation Episcopal
District Episcopal Diocese of Washington
Country United States of America
Year consecrated 1878
Leadership Rev. Joseph M. Constant
Website http://saintjohnsbeltsville.org/about-us/who-we-are/
Architectural description
Architectural style Gothic Revival
Completed 1877
Materials brick, wood shingle roof

St. John's Episcopal Church, Zion Parish in Beltsville, Maryland is a historic place of worship whose congregation dates back more than two centuries.

The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland established the parish in 1811 and it first held services in Old Paint Branch Chapel in Calverton, Maryland near the border between Prince Georges County, Maryland and Montgomery County, Maryland. Between 1825 and 1847, the congregation worshiped in Vansville, Maryland, also in Prince Georges County. The wooden structures used by the congregation in the 19th century were destroyed by fire, storm, tornado and lightning.

Two other historic once rural parishes have similar names. One, Zion Episcopal Church, was established in Urbana in Frederick County, Maryland in 1802 and burned down in 1961, although the ruins and cemetery remain as a historic site and the church is expected to be rebuilt. Another, known as St. Mark's Paint Branch Chapel, was built in 1774 in what became Silver Spring in Montgomery County, Maryland, rebuilt in 1835 and ultimately removed in 1877 and replaced by a modern structure circa 1980.

In 1855, the St. John's Zion Parish vestry received 1.5 acres along the Baltimore Pike from innkeeper John W. Brown (whose establishment was 1.25 miles south) and his wife, and the property eventually increased to about 3 acres. A frame building was then erected, and soon a cemetery. Rev. William Pinkney, then the rector of St. Matthew's Parish in Hyattsville since 1836, spoke during the 1857 consecration and took care of parishioners during their first year at this location. During the American Civil War, Union artillery forces occupied the strategic site on a hill overlooking historic Route 1. However, it was destroyed by fire in 1868 and rebuilt in wood, only to be again destroyed by a severe storm in 1874.


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