New Danville Mennonite Church (Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA)

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Bishop Hans Burkholder and Minister Melchior Brenneman came with the Brubakers, Hostetters, Greiders, Hersheys, Stinemans, Leamans, Swarrs, Kauffmans, and other Mennonites from the Palatinate formed a settlement in 1717 in what was still Chester County, along the Conestoga River and its branches in southern Manor and Conestoga townships. The Mennonite settlers became part of the Lower Conestoga district, which developed into the New Danville, Byerland, and River Corner congregations, bordering on the western edge of the Lancaster County Mennonite colony that began in 1710.

On 1 July 1755, Stephen Brenneman, son of the first Preacher Melchior Brenneman, and wife, and John Burkholder, son of the first Bishop Hans Burkholder, all of Conestoga township, sold one acre of land, together with a meetinghouse thereon erected, and the graveyard to John Herr, Charles Christopher, and Jacob Boehm, the elders and trustees of the Mennonist congregation, in Conestoga township. Stone meetinghouses were erected in 1855 and again in 1878. During these years, the congregation was often referred to as the Stone Church. In 1907, New Danville built a new brick meetinghouse. Significant renovations took place in 1945, especially in the basement, creating Sunday school rooms. In 1968, the church added a foyer at the building's entry. In 1987, the congregation added a large annex, which doubled the size of the meetinghouse.

New Danville met every two weeks into the 1940s, when it began holding services every Sunday morning.

In 2024, New Danville planted the Motley Church.

Bibliography

Harnish, Lindsay Druck. New Danville: Church, Community, Heritage, 1717-1992. Lancaster, Pa.: New Danville Mennonite Church, 1992.

"New Danville Mennonite Church." LMC: A Fellowship of Anabaptist Churches. 14 May 2024. Web. 9 December 2025. https://lmcchurches.org/2024/05/new-danville-mennonite-church/.

Ruth, John L. The Earth is the Lord's: a narrative history of the Lancaster Mennonite Conference. Scottdale, Pa.: Herald Press, 2001: 267, 949-951, 1019-1020, 1138-1169.

Weaver, Martin G. Mennonites of Lancaster Conference: containing biographical sketches of Mennonite leaders, histories of congregations, missions, and Sunday schools, record of ordinations, and other interesting historical data. Scottdale, PA: Mennonite Publishing House, 1931. Reprinted Ephrata, PA: Eastern Pennsylvania Mennonite Church Publication Board, 1982: 37, 91-92, 102-106, 113. Available in full electronic text at https://archive.org/details/mennonitesoflanc00weav_0/page/n3/mode/2up.

Additional Information

Address: 103 Marticville Road, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 17603

Telephone: 717-872-8111

Website: https://newdanvillechurch.com/

Denominational Affiliations:

LMC: a Fellowship of Anabaptist Churches

Mennonite Church USA (Until 2017)

Pastoral Leaders at New Danville Mennonite Church

Name Years
of Service
Hans Burkholder (1670?-1745?)(Bishop) 1717-1740s?
Melchior Brenneman (1665-1737) 1717-1730
Jacob Hostetter (1680s?-1761)(Bishop) 1740s-1761
Martin Boehm (1725-1812)
(Bishop)
1756-1761
1761-1777
John Shenk (1747-1813) ?-1813
Jacob Brubacher (1751-1832)
(Bishop)
1780?-1783?
1743?-1832
Daniel Sterneman (1767-1851) By 1813-1851?
Samuel Myers (1780-1851) 18??-1851?
John Brubacher (1787-1842)
(Bishop)
1829-1831
1831-1842
John Huber (1791-1861) 18??-1861?
Henry Shenk (1794-1865)
(Bishop)
1839-1843
1943-1865
Joseph Burkholder (1803-1875)
(Bishop)
1846-1864
1864-1875
Martin Miller (1798-1880) 1858-1880
John B. Harnish (1829-1908) 1865-1908
Jacob K. Brubaker (1814-1879)(Bishop) 1875-1879
Abraham B. Herr (1845-1925)
(Bishop)
1875-1899
1899-1925
Amos Shenk (1832-1909)(Bishop) 1879-1891?
Jacob H. Thomas (1849-1939) 1899-1939
Aaron B. Harnish (1856-1938) 1904-1938
Daniel N. Lehman (1852-1925)(Bishop) 1921-1925
Maris W. Hess (1892-1965) 1923-1940s
John H. Mosemann (1877-1938)(Bishop) 1926-1938
James H. Hess (1911-1998) 1934-1940s
D. Stoner Krady (1894-1966)(Bishop) 1937-1966
Henry W. Nauman (1910-1956)
(Bishop)
1938-1947
1947-1956
David N. Thomas (1919-2000)
(Bishop)
1948-1956
1956-1986
Elias H. Groff (1906-2008) 1957-1980
Jay C. Garber (1933-2025) 1966-1998
Ernest Hess (1942-2024)(Bishop) 1986-2006?
Mervin S. Stoltzfus (Associate) 1991-1992
J. Robert Metzler (Associate) 1992-1993
Nathan L. Yoder 1997-2000?
Curtiss Lee Kanagy 2001-2010
Interim Leadership? 2010-2013
Keith Roberts (Associate) 2020-2023?
Mike Dickert (Worship & Discipleship) 2023-2024?
Robert Brody 2013-

New Danville Mennonite Church Membership

Year Members
1908 425
In District
1915 240
1920 240
1930 450
In District
1940 477
In District
1950 280
1960 236
1970 204
1980 237
1990 211
2000 211
2009 140

Original Mennonite Encyclopedia Article

By Ira D. Landis. Copied by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 3, p. 861. All rights reserved.

The New Danville Mennonite Church (Mennonite Church (MC)), in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, a member of the Lancaster Mennonite Conference, was built on the land of Bishop Hans Burkholder and Melchior Brenneman, pioneers of 1717. The cemetery is still there. In the overflow from the Lampeter-Strasburg settlement of 1710 many of the new arrivals in 1717 came into this area.

The first meetinghouse, built in 1755 in this stump land, was called Stumptown. It was replaced in 1855 and 1878 by stone churches, and therefore became known as the Stone Church. The new one of brick built in 1907 gradually took on the present name of the nearby town. This was the home district of Bishop Martin Boehm, organizer of the United Brethren Church. The membership in 1956 was 260, with David N. Thomas as bishop and James H. Hess as the minister. A three-room Christian day school nearby was sponsored by the district.


Author(s) Samuel J Steiner
Date Published December 2025

Cite This Article

MLA style

Steiner, Samuel J. "New Danville Mennonite Church (Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. December 2025. Web. 12 Feb 2026. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=New_Danville_Mennonite_Church_(Lancaster,_Pennsylvania,_USA)&oldid=181354.

APA style

Steiner, Samuel J. (December 2025). New Danville Mennonite Church (Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 12 February 2026, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=New_Danville_Mennonite_Church_(Lancaster,_Pennsylvania,_USA)&oldid=181354.




©1996-2026 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.