CLOSED CHURCHES WITHIN THE
PRESENT BOUNDARIES OF THE
SUSQUEHANNA CONFERENCE OF
THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
The information for each
church is arranged in alphabetical order within counties. Select a county.
Adams | Bedford | Blair | Bradford | Centre | Clearfield | Clinton | Columbia | Cumberland | Dauphin | Franklin | Fulton | Huntingdon| Juniata | Lackawanna | Luzerne | Lycoming | Mifflin | Montour | Northumberland
| Perry | Pike | Potter | Schuylkill | Snyder | Sullivan | Susquehanna | Tioga | Union | Wayne | Wyoming | York
FULTON COUNTY PA
1. Akersville UMC

Location: 3431 South Valley Rd [PA 915], village of Akersville
Municipality: Brush Creek township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From US 30, at the western edge of
Fulton County, go 3 miles south on PA 915.
The church is on the right, across from the intersection with Duvall
Road and before PA 915 takes a sharp turn to the right at the intersection with
Pleasant Valley Road.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1972,99 –
discontinued
1974,210 – sold school building only
1992,354&356 – sold to cemetery
association
Brief History:
This congregation was organized in 1812 and worshiped in
the second story of the John Akers grist mill, the home of Robert Akers and the
school house until the church was erected in 1858 on land deeded by Israel
Akers in 1837. The Sunday School was organized in 1841. The congregation, which numbered 46 at the
time of the 1968 Methodist-EUB union, was never large but has sent at least 8 men into the ministry (viz., Joseph Benson Akers, John
Milton Akers, George A. Duvall, Lewis A. Duvall, Arthur A. Duvall, Ira R.
Duvall, Jacob Barkman, George S. Hixson). The congregation produced a thorough
historical booklet for its 1958 centennial.
Final disposition:
The property was sold to the Akersville Cemetery Association in 1991 for $250 plus legal
fees. The building is maintained in good
repair and has housed a small community congregation on an irregular basis.
2. Bedford Chapel ME

Location: PA 643
Municipality: Bethel township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From the interchange
of I-70 with US 522, go 4 miles north on US 522 to PA 643. Go west 3 miles west PA 643 to the base of
Sideling Hill. The church is on the
left.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1892,56 – church
erected
1955,56 – declared abandoned; conference
trustees authorized to sell
Brief History:
The property was sold to the church in
1890 by Job L. and Emily J. Hill for $30.
The church was erected mainly due to the efforts of
local preacher Lewis Chambers, who lived in Big Cove Tannery and guided the
Licking Creek [Harrisonville] charge (either as the preacher in charge or
behind the scenes) from 1873 to 1903.
Final disposition:
The congregation has gone
from the Methodist Church to the Christian Church to being independent.
3. Bethlehem UMC

Location: Peach Orchard Road
Municipality: Todd township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
Peach Orchard Road goes north off the old US 30 and cannot
be accessed from the new US 30 by-pass.
Go 1 mile west of McConnellsburg on the old US
30 to Peach Orchard Road. Go 3 miles
north on Peach Orchard Road. The church
is on the left, at a point where the main road makes a sharp bend to the right.
Historic Conference:
Allegheny Conference of the United
Brethren Church
Pennsylvania Conference of the United
Brethren Church
Journal references:
1936,81 – taken
from Hustontown, placed under care of Three Springs
charge
1943,79 – reopened; moved to Shade Gap
charge
1944,44 – increases from 0 to 14 members
1972,99 – to McConnellsburg-Cito
charge
1990,229 – merged into Knobsville
UMC
Brief History:
This very old
appointment was founded in 1849 and known as Scrub Ridge. It shifted back and forth between the
Pennsylvania and Allegheny Conference before being taken permanently by the
Allegheny Conference in in 1893 and placed on the Hustontown
charge. The Hustontown
charge was dissolved in 1926 and Bethlehem was referred to the conference
trustees as a vacant property. The
building was not sold, and it remained under the care of the Three Springs
charge. The church was reopened in 1943
and placed on the Shade Gap charge (with Mt. Zion, Salem, and Pleasant Hill)
through two denominational mergers until 1972.
It was placed on the McConnellsburg charge in
1972, on the Knobsville charge in 1986, and closed in
1990.
Final disposition:
The building is now a private home.
4. Black Oak ME

Location: Stoney Break Road
Municipality: Bethel township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Warfordsburg, go west 3.5
miles on PA 484 to the crossroad at Stoneybreak. Go south 2 miles on Stoney Break Road. The church is on the right, shortly after
Black Oak Road goes off to the east.
Historic Conference:
Baltimore Conference of
the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1924,457 – sale
authorized; proceeds toward parsonage at Warfordsburg
Brief History:
Beginning in
1890 Black Oak was on the Hancock circuit, with churches in Maryland and
Pennsylvania. For much of that time a
4-week morning, afternoon, evening cycle similar to the following was in place.
week #1: Hancock MD, Catalpa
MD, Hancock MD
week #2: Piney Plains MD (near
Orleans), Buck Valley PA, Black Oak PA
week #3: Hancock MD, Orchard
Ridge MD (near Millstone), Hancock MD
week #4: Little Cove PA,
Rehoboth PA, Hancock MD
After Warfordsburg was added, the strain become too
much and the charge was eventually split about 1921. Soon after that Black Oak was abandoned, with
the idea of using the proceeds to help finance a parsonage in Warfordsburg.
Final disposition:
The building was deeded to the
Cedar Grove Mennonite congregation in 1952, with a reversion clause to the
Baltimore Conference if it ceased to be used as a church. In 1991 (Baltimore Conference journal 1991,313) the reversion clause was removed. The building is now a Mennonite
church.
5. Buck Valley ME

Location: PA 484, village of Buck Valley
Municipality: Union township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Warfordsburg
go west 6.5 miles on PA 484 to the village of Buck Valley. The church is on the left, where PA 731 goes
off to the north.
Historic Conference:
Baltimore Conference of
the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
Brief History:
This building was erected in 1882. Beginning in 1890 Buck Valley was on the
Hancock circuit, with churches in Maryland and Pennsylvania. For much of that time a 4-week morning,
afternoon, evening cycle similar to the following was in place.
week #1: Hancock MD, Catalpa
MD, Hancock MD
week #2: Piney Plains MD (near
Orleans), Buck Valley PA, Black Oak PA
week #3: Hancock MD, Orchard
Ridge MD (near Millstone), Hancock MD
week #4: Little Cove PA,
Rehoboth PA, Hancock MD
After Warfordsburg was added, the strain become too
much and the charge was eventually split about 1921, with a parsonage in Warfordsburg for Warfordsburg,
Buck Valley, Piney Plains and Rehoboth, and Little Cove. That charge was dissolved in 1944 with Little
Cove placed back with Hancock and the other churches added to the Morgan charge
(out of Berkeley Springs WV). In 1948
the Warfordsburg charge was reconstituted with Piney
Plains. Warfordsburg, Rehoboth and Little Cove and a
parsonage at Orleans (near Piney Plains).
Buck Valley does not appear on the reconstituted charge and apparently
was dropped as an appointment at that time or shortly before.
Final disposition:
The building is standing and in good
repair, apparently maintained by the community, but not housing a congregation.
6. Burnt Cabins UMC

Location: US 522, west end of the village of Burnt Cabins
Municipality: Dublin township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From the interchange of the PA Turnpike and US 522, go 4 miles east on
US 522. The church is on the left,
shortly before US 522 takes a turn to the north in the village of Burnt
Cabins.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1884,51 –
purchased two lots for church/parsonage; move from former outside town site
1993,219/350 discontinued/merged into Knobsville
1995,221
abandoned
1996,315
sold to Burnt Cabins Bible Church
Brief History:
This congregation was organized
in 1851 and erected its first building in the east end of town, on a lane
heading north, on a rise just north of Aughwich Creek
– and just across the county line in Huntingdon County. The present structure in the west end of town
was erected in 1883.
Final disposition:
The building now houses the Burnt Cabins
Bible Church.
7. Dublin Mills UMC

Location: village of Dublin Mills
Municipality: Taylor township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Waterfall, go 2 miles south on PA 655 to Dublin Mills
Road. Go west on Dublin Mills Road 2 miles
to the village of Dublin Mills. The site
is on the northeast corner of Dublin Mills Road and Miller Road.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania Conference of the Methodist
Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1885,49 – new
building
1972,99 – discontinued
1976(1),140 – sold
Brief History:
The church building here was erected
in 1883 on the site of the Dawney-Woodal store, which
burned in the town’s 1881 fire. Dublin
Mills was a member of the Hustontown charge (with Center,
Clear Ridge, Fairview, Hustontown, and Maddensville).
Final disposition:
8. Ebenezer UMC

Address: 226 Ebenezer Church Road
Municipality: Belfast township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Harrisonville, go 7 miles south on PA
655 to the jog in the road by the camp meeting ground. Turn west into Ebenezer Church Road and go
1.5 miles. The church is on the left.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
Brief History:
The oldest grave in the cemetery dates
from 1851, but the congregation’s first building appears to date from about
1886, as the 1886 journal (page 51) reports that foundations are being
laid. The present structure includes
front and rear additions to that first building.
On
2/9/2023 the congregation voted 31-0-1 to disaffiliate from the United
Methodist Church, and that disaffiliation along with 140 others was approved at
a 5/17/2023 special session of the Susquehanna Conference.
Final disposition:
9. Fort Littleton UMC
Location: 2829 Plum Hollow Road, village of Fort Littleton
Municipality: Dublin township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From the Fort
Littleton interchange of the PA turnpike, go 0.7 miles north on US 522 to the
bend to the right at the village of Fort Littleton. Proceed straight, toward Clear Ridge, on Plum
Hollow Road and go 0.5 miles. The
building is on the left.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1882,226&353
– discontinued
1995,221&335 – abandoned
1996,315 – sold
Brief History:
This is a very
old preaching appointment that was established before 1800 and visited by
Francis Asbury on his episcopal rounds.
The original log chapel stood in the cemetery 0.7 miles north of US 522
on the unnamed road at the top of the bend to the right in US 522. In 1863 a two-story frame building was
erected in the village. In 1961 that
building was razed and the existing one-story brick building was erected on the
same property, near the 1863 site. The
congregation was discontinued in 1992.

1863-1961 prior to 1863
Final disposition:
The building was sold in 1995 to be used a
place of business for selling and repairing sewing machines. In 2023 it was home to “Fraker’s
Vacuum Cleaners & Sewing Machine Sales & Service.” The remaining congregation relocated a few
hundred yards west, to the other side of the road, as the Fort Littleton Bible
Church.
10. Harrisonville Asbury UMC

Address: 7404 Lincoln Highway [US 30]
Municipality: Licking Creek township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Harrisonville, go 6 miles west on US
30. The church is on the left.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
Brief History:
This congregation was
organized in 1836, and the ground upon the church was erected was purchased in
1839. For many years the Harrisonville
charge was known as the Licking Creek charge.
On
2/9/2023 the congregation voted 17-0 to disaffiliate from the United Methodist
Church, and that disaffiliation along with 140 others was approved at a
5/17/2023 special session of the Susquehanna Conference.
Final disposition:
11. Hustontown Hartman Memorial UMC

Location: 119 Church Street
Municipality: Dublin township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
Church Street id PA
655 heading south out of Hustontown. The site is 2½ blocks south of Waterfall Road
(PA 655 heading west out of Hustontown), at the very
southern end of town, on the west side of the road.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1894,63 –
dedicated as Daniel Hartman Memorial Church 11/19/1893
2007,19 – discontinued
2009,340 – sold to Hartman Cemetery
Association
Brief History:
This congregation began as a Sunday School
organized in the school house in 1849.
It was known as the Wooden Bridge Sabbath
School. In 1851
traveling minister Daniel Hartman led in the building of a chapel on the
present cemetery site. It became known as Hartman’s Chapel. The present building was
erected in 1803 and dedicated as the Hartman Memorial Methodist Episcopal
Church of Hustontown.
Final disposition:
The property was sold top
the Hartman Memorial Cemetery Association in 2008 for $10,000 and the building
now (2025) houses the Grace Bible Methodist Church of Hustontown.
12. Hustontown UB

Location: Church Street, village of Hustontown
Municipality: Taylor township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
In the center of the
village of Hustontown, at the intersection of Church
Street and Pitt Street, PA 655 makes a 90° turn. PA 655 goes south on Church Street and West
on Pitt Street. Go South on Church
Street one full block to First Street.
The building is on the southeast corner of Church and First Streets.
Historic Conference:
Allegheny Conference of
the United Brethren Church
Journal references:
1892,40 – Fulton
(from Pennsylvania Conference) added to Altoona District
Fulton re-named Hustontown
1893,10 – new church dedicated 11/20/1892
1926,82&88 – referred to conference
trustees as a vacant property
1927,134 – sold for $500 with money turned
over to the conference treasurer
Brief History:
The 5-point Hustontown UB charge was discontinued in 1926 (page 82&88):
Hustontown, Bethlehem (later reopened) and Cromwell
(later reopened?) were declared vacant; Wells Valley and Mt. Tabor were placed
on the Three Springs charge.
Final disposition:
The building, with a one-story extension in
the front, is now a private home.
13. Knobsville UB
Location: Narrows Road
Municipality: Todd township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Knobsville, go north on US 522 about 1 mile to Narrows
Road, the first paved road to the east.
Go east6 on Narrows Road 0.5 miles to Stage Coach Road. The Church stood on the southeast corner of
Narrows and Stage Coach roads, where the remaining
cemetery is located.
Historic Conference:
Allegheny Conference of
the United Brethren Church
Journal references:
Brief History:
This the
first church building erected in Todd township, this structure was erected in 1844 as the
Nazareth Reformed Church. The building
was used by the Reformed people and others until about 1916 when it was
removed. The remaining cemetery is
officially known as the Reformed Cemetery – but it is sometimes referred to as
the United Brethren Cemetery, probably indicating that the United Brethren were
the last to occupy the site on a regular basis.
The United Brethren never had any ownership in the building, but it was
a regular appointment on the Hustontown circuit when
H.R. Reber served there – as verified by a 1907
newspaper account.
A similar
situation may have existed in Ayr township,
near Big Cove Tannery, where another Reformed cemetery exists that is also
sometimes referred to as a United Brethren cemetery. The Hebron Reformed Church was erected there
1843, but there is no known primary source documentation that the United
Brethren denomination ever had an appointment there.
Final disposition:
14. McKendree UMC

Location: 12347 Old 126
Municipality: Brush Creek township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
At the Crystal Spring
exit [exit #151] on I-70, PA 915 goes north and the “old road” goes south. Go south on Old 126 for 2 miles. The church is on the west side of the highwat.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1998,213 – discontinued
Brief History:
A log church
building was erected at this location about 1825 and replaced by the present
brick structure in 1867
Final disposition:
The building now (2025) houses the Breezewood Wesley United Parish, a congregation formed by dissentinf members who left the Breezewood
UMC and Wesley Chapel UMC congregations in Bedford County in 2023.
15. Mount Tabor UB

Location: N. Hess Road
Municipality: Taylor township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Hustontown, go north 4 miles on Waterfall Road [PA 655] to
the N. Hess Road [entrance to Forbes Road Schools]. Go west ¾ miles on N. Hess Road. The church is on the left.
Historic Conference:
Pennsylvania Conference of the United
Brethren Church
Allegheny Conference of
the United Brethren Church
Journal references:
Pennsylvania
Conference
1887,12 – congregation begun
1893,23 – Fulton circuit taken by
Allegheny Conference
Allegheny Conference
1926,88 – Hustontown
circuit dissolved, Mount Tabor to Three Springs circuit
1946,126 – investigation of deed/ownership
Brief History:
The 1887 journal of Pennsylvania Conference,
page 12, states: “What is known as the Speck church in Fulton County, has been
thrown open to us and is being repaired.”
As the property was properly well within the bounds of the Allegheny
Conference, that body assumed control in 1893.
Fulton’s 1931 History of the Allegheny Conference states:
“The church is a frame building valued at $1,000. This is home of Rev. D. Speck and for many
years was called the “Speck” Church. The
present membership is twenty.” Although
the property was always consider United Brethren, it was deeded October 21,
1886, as a Community Church for the use "of all religious orthodox
denominations." By 1946 it was no
longer reporting conference statistics and an investigation indicated, “It is
now being used by the Church of the Nazarene.”
Final disposition:
The building now houses a Church of the Nazarene
congregation.
16. Mt. Zion ME

Location: Timber Ridge Road
Municipality: Thompson township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Needmore, go 2.5 miles north/east on US 522 to Timber Ridge
Road. Go 2.5 miles south on Timber Ridge
Road. The building stood on the east
side of the road, south of the Congregational Christian Church (seen in the
picture above).
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1916,79 – old
structure replaced by “neat cement-block building”
1954,55 – declared abandoned; permission
granted to sell
Brief History:
The date the
class was organized and the date the first building was erected are
unknown. It appears as Timber Ridge in
the 1874 missionary reports for the Cove charge. The appointment first appears as Mount Zion
in the 1895 missionary reports for the Harrisonville charge. A new building was erected in 1915. While the 1953 journal listed 25 members,
only an annual service had been held for about ten years.
Final disposition:
The Antioch Congregational Christian Church
purchased the structure for possible youth work, but then razed the building.
17. Needmore UMC

Location: village of Needmore
Municipality: Belfast township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From the “square” in Needmore (from which point US 522 and PA 655 head north, US
522 heads south, and PA 655 heads east) go west on Pleasant Grove Road 1
block. The building is on the left,
immediately after the curve in the road.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
1916,79 –
building under construction, a new church in a new field
1918,71 – building dedicated
7/15/1917
1975(2),107 – abandoned
1975(2),104 – sold to Needmore
Bible Church
1976(1),140 – sold to Needmore
Bible Church
Brief History:
Needmore first appears on the six-point Harrisonville
charge Harrisonville (Asbury, Bedford Chapel, Ebenezer, Mt. Zion, Neeedmore, Siloam) in 1918 with a
membership of 35. The last reported membership
was 52 in 1969, as part of the four-point Harrisonville charge (Harrisonville
Asbury, Ebenezer, Needmore, Siloam), after which most
of the member chose to withdraw.
Final disposition:
The Needmore Bible
Church has since relocated to a new building on US 522 south of Needmore, and the former Methodist building was sold to the
Southern Fulton School District.
18. Oakley ME

Location: PA 655
Municipality: Thompson township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From US 522 in the
village of Needmore, go 2 miles south on PA 655 (aka
Thompson Road). The site is on the west
side of the highway.
Historic Conference:
Baltimore Conference of
the Methodist Episcopal Church
Central Pennsylvania Conference of the
Methodist Church,
by
1962 change of conference boundaries
Journal references:
1971,97 –
discontinued
1975(1),116 – permission to raze
1981,A76 – permission to sell to Cemetery
Association
1981,203 – sold
Brief History:
This property was
deeded [Fulton County Deed Book #8, p83-84] to the Methodists January 22, 1874,
and placed on the large Hancock circuit of the Baltimore Conference with the
condition that the Christian Church have occasional privileges when the
property was not being used by the Methodists.
The Baltimore Conference journals did not list individual statistics for
each congregation on the various charges until 1948, and by then Oakley was
apparently no longer in use. When
southern Fulton County was transferred to the Central Pennsylvania Conference
in 1962, that conference received an empty building with no membership. It officially declared the appointment
discontinued in 1972
Final disposition:
The March 17, 1975, meeting of the Central
Pennsylvania Conference Board of Trustees voted permission to Gerald Lake and
Donald L. Pepple to raze the Oakley church building
and take any materials of value, provided that the site is cleaned and made
presentable. The property was sold to
the Cemetery Association for $1.00.
19. Pine Grove UMC

Location: PA 915, east of Wells Tannery
Municipality: Wells township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
The church is on the
south side of PA 915, 1.5 miles east of Wells Tannery and .5 miles west of
Wells Valley Road.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
2004,173 – discontinued
2005,365 – sold to Gary Hockensmith
Brief History:
The first
Methodist building in this area is reported to have been a 12’ x 18’ log
structure about 300 yards “up the road” erected in 1871 by Rev. George W. Bouse of the Three Springs charge. No deed has been found that that
property.
The present location dates from
1880, when Alexander Gibson and his wife Rebecca sold 1 acre and 34 perches to
the congregation for $25. The church
building was erected in the following year.
In the face of declining membership and finances, and the deteriorating
condition of the building, the congregation voted to close effective
12/31/2003.
Final disposition:
The property was sold to Gary Hockensmith H. Suzanne Hockensmith
for $16,278.95. The building was unsafe
and has been razed.
20. Siloam UMC

Address: 9541 Pleasant Ridge Road [PA 655]
Municipality: Licking Creek township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Harrisonville, go 3 miles south on PA
655. The church is on the right.
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania Conference
of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
Brief History:
This church building was erected in 1878,
and the addition was completed in the 1950’s.
On
2/9/2023 the congregation voted 28-3 to disaffiliate from the United Methodist
Church, and that disaffiliation along with 140 others was approved at a
5/17/2023 special session of the Susquehanna Conference.
21. Waterfall Zion ME [see Huntingdon County closed church file]
[no picture]
Location:
Municipality:
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
Historic Conference:
Central Pennsylvania Conference of the
Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
Brief History:
This congregation
relocated across the highway to a site in Huntingdon County, in which file
their recent information may be found.
Final disposition:
The building
was unsafe and has been razed.
22. Warfordsburg UMC

Address: Barnhart’s Store Lane, village of Warfordsburg
Municipality: Bethel township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From the interchange of I-70 and US 522,
go south one block on the extension of US 522 to PA 484. Turn east on PA 484 and go ½ mile (past the
high school) into the village of Warfordsburg. Turn north at the store onto the only lane
going north off PA 484 and go one block.
The church is the last building on the left.
Historic Conference:
Baltimore Conference of
the Methodist Episcopal Church
Journal references:
Brief History:
Warfordsburg,
Rehoboth and Little Cove [Franklin County] have been served together since
their founding. When the Central
Pennsylvania Conference was formed in 1869, they were part of the large Hancock
MD circuit – and so they remained in the Baltimore Conference. Two other Pennsylvania churches on that
circuit were Black Oak and Buck Valley.
In 1921 a Warfordsburg charge was formed, and
in 1924 a parsonage was purchased in Warfordsburg. In 1944 the Warfordsburg
charge was dissolved and mostly taken into the Morgan WV circuit (with the
Little Cove returning to the Hancock circuit).
In 1947 the Warfordsburg charge was reformed
with 3 churches (Warfordsburg, Rehoboth and Little
Cove) in PA and 1 church (Piney Plains) and the parsonage (Little Orleans) in
MD. When the conferences were redefined
along state lines in 1962, Warfordsburg, Rehoboth and
Little Cove came into the Central Pennsylvania Conference as a charge without a
parsonage – and have remained so ever since.
Following a period of declining membership,
Warfordsburg closed in 2024.
Final disposition:
The property was sold to the neighboring Odd Fellows Lodge for $5000,
with their pledge to maintain the cemetery.
23. Wells Valley UB

Location: Wells Valley Road
Municipality: Wells township
County: Fulton
State: PA
Directions:
From Hustontown, go west/northwest on PA 655 for 8 miles to PA
913 at Waterfall. Go west on PA 913 for
1 mile to New Grenada and Wells Valley Road.
Go south on Wells Valley Road for ½ miles. The church is on the left.
Historic Conference:
Allegheny Conference of the United
Brethren Church
Journal references:
1926,88 – Hustontown
circuit dissolved, Wells Valley to Three Spring circuit
1929,107 – Wells Valley and Oak Grove
unite, Wells Valley members transfer to Oak Grove.
Brief History:
The congregation
was organized in 1850 by the pastor of the Juniata circuit, and a church
building was erected in 1853. Despite
having supposedly merged into Oak Grove (in Huntingdon County) in 1929, there
were 11 members listed at the time of the 1968 union – but starting in 1970
(page 106) the congregation is no longer listed.
Final disposition: