Old Indian Meeting House

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Old Indian Meeting House
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Location: Mashpee, Massachusetts
Coordinates: 41°37′28″N 70°28′45″W / 41.62444, -70.47917Coordinates: 41°37′28″N 70°28′45″W / 41.62444, -70.47917
Built/Founded: 1684
Architect: Hinckley, Deacon John
Architectural style(s): Colonial, Greek Revival, Italianate
Added to NRHP: December 03, 1998
NRHP Reference#: 98001383

[1]

Governing body: Private

Old Indian Meeting House or "Old Indian Church" is an historic meetinghouse at 410 Meetinghouse Road in Mashpee, Massachusetts. The meetinghouse is to the oldest extant Native American church in the United States and the oldest church on Cape Cod.[2][3]

The church was built in 1684 by Deacon John Hinckley on the site of an earlier Indian meetinghouse built in 1670, and the church was used by the Wampanoag Native Americans as a Christian church.[1] In 1717 the church was moved from its original location in the town to its current one and the building was remodeled at this time.[4] The building also served as a school, and a late eighteenth cemetery ("burial ground") is located on the grounds.[1] The site was rededicated in 1923 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1998.[1] The meetinghouse is still used by the Wampanoag tribe for ceremonies.

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