Pon Pon Chapel
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The Pon Pon Chapel was established in South Carolina, USA in 1725 by an Act of the General Assembly. Pon Pon Chapel of Ease was one of two churches serving St. Bartholomew’s Parish after the Yemassee War in 1715 aborted plans for a parish church. The chapel site was located on Parker’s Ferry Road, the busy stagecoach thoroughfare that connected Charleston, South Carolina and Savannah, Georgia.
In 1754, a brick chapel was erected to replace the earlier wooden structure. This brick chapel burned circa 1801, causing Pon Pon Chapel to become subsequently known as the "Burnt Church". The chapel was rebuilt between 1819 and 1822, and was in use until 1832 when it was again reduced to ruins. The façade of Pon Pon Chapel had a central, rounded arched entrance flanked by rounded arched windows on either side, all constructed in a brickwork pattern of one stretcher alternating with two headers. The two round windows in the façade’s upper level utilized the same brickwork pattern. The walls were constructed in Flemish Bond.
The chapel’s historical significance is due in part to Rev. John Wesley preaching two sermons here on April 24, 1737 and for its burial ground that contains the remains of United States Congressmen Aedanus Burke and O’Brien Smith, in addition to numerous local leaders. The chapel was listed in the US National Register of Historic Places on January 5, 1972.[1]