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Charlotte Meeting House

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After a windstorm damaged the building in 1950, the association voted to sell it to the Shelburne Museum so that it could be preserved. In 1952, the Shelburne Museum dismantled the building and moved it to its grounds, finding replacements for missing or damaged elements, including the
89:. In 1902, the group incorporated as the Breezy Point Library Association and bought the building to serve as the town library. Charles W. Henry, Vermont's foremost painted theater curtain artist, often painted backdrops for the association's productions. 151:, a separate bell tower, and the entrance and pulpit situated on the long sides of the building. By the late eighteenth century, as communities began to distinguish between meeting houses and churches, 492: 132:
and incorporated bell tower, with the entrance located along the structure's short axis and the pulpit positioned opposite. Since the church plan and the word "church" connoted
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By 1899 it had ceased to function as a church and was taken over by a group of thirteen young women who had formed an amateur theatrical group and used the building as a
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in the mid-nineteenth century. The lack of other adornment, typical of the Greek Revival style, lent itself well to New England Protestant architecture.
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The building was originally erected by the Charlotte Methodist Church in 1840, after their original wooden structure was destroyed in a fire in 1837.
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The structure reflects the stylistic tendencies established in the last decade of the 18th century when the church plan became the standard on which
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communities used the term "meeting house" to refer to the building they used for both secular and religious meetings.
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communities adopted both the title "church" and the associated plan in designing their religious buildings.
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Exterior of the Charlotte Meeting House located at the Shelburne, Museum.
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were designed. The church plan refers to a rectangular structure with a
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Index


44°22′37.98″N 73°13′52.36″W / 44.3772167°N 73.2312111°W / 44.3772167; -73.2312111
Methodist
Charlotte, Vermont
Shelburne Museum
Shelburne, Vermont
playhouse
belfry
pews
pulpit
Milton, Vermont
Trompe-l'œil
meeting houses
pitched roof
Anglicanism
Puritan
Congregationalists
hipped roofs
Protestant
pediment
cornice
Greek Revival architecture







"Shelburne Museum | Meeting House"

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