Bethlehem's Bell House, Old Chapel and Central Church Belfry.
The Bell House (left), Old Chapel (center), and Central Moravian Church Belfry (background) at Moravian Church Settlements — Bethlehem (Pennsylvania, USA).

Bethlehem

Moravian Church Settlements – Bethlehem is situated in the heart of the City of Bethlehem, in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, USA, 90 miles west of New York City and 50 miles north of Philadelphia. 

Today, the city has a population of just over 75,000.

Moravian Church Settlements – Bethlehem was established in 1741 near the confluence of the Monocacy Creek and Lehigh River to house a congregation of Moravian Church immigrants from Europe and to support missionary outreach to Native Americans. This was funded by a General Economy concentrated in the community’s Colonial Industrial Quarter and supplemented by light manufacturing in the Choir Houses. 

Bethlehem incorporates a significant collection of early Moravian Church buildings including:

  • 1741 Gemeinhaus: 66 West Church Street
  • 1746 Bell House: 56 West Church Street
  • Single Sisters’ House: 50 West Church Street
  • 1768 Widows’ House: 53 West Church Street
  • 1751 Old Chapel: 64 West Church Street
  • 1806 Moravian Church Sanctuary: 400 Main Street
  • Second Single Brethren’s House: 99 West Church Street
  • Colonial Industrial Quarter: 459 Old York Road
  • God’s Acre Cemetery: 1501 North New Street

TOUR THE BETHLEHEM WORLD HERITAGE SITES

Located along Church Street, the Gemeinhaus is a National Historic Landmark, home to the Moravian Museum, and is the only 1700s Gemeinhaus in the world. Photo by Durston Saylor.

The site along the Monocacy Creek also emphasizes the Moravian Church’s technological and industrial importance.

The historic God’s Acre cemetery is located along Market Street.

The site also emphasizes the Moravian Church’s technological and industrial importance. Its industrial quarter features the pioneering 1762 Waterworks (the first pumped municipal water system in North America and a National Historic Landmark) and the 1761 Tannery (the only 18th-century Moravian industrial building extant in the world), and the archeological remains of the dye house, oil mill, pottery, and butchery.

Bethlehem was the first permanent Moravian Church settlement in North America and served as the primary religious and administrative center of the Moravian Church, significantly influencing the Church’s expansion in North America and the Caribbean.

Located in the Colonial Industrial Quarter, the 1762 Waterworks was the first pumped municipal water system in North America and a National Historic Landmark. Photo by Durston Saylor.
1748 Second Single Brethren’s House, home to Moravian Seminary for Young Ladies starting in 1815, today houses Moravian University’s Music Dept. Photo by Durston Saylor

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