Old Pine Street Church

Old Pine Street Church is a Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania built in 1768.

American Revolution
Old Pine became known as the "Church of the Patriots" because many of the parishioners such as John Adams, stood with George Washington. George Duffield served as pastor from 1772 until 1790; during the American Revolution, Duffield served as a chaplain of the Continental Congress.

Joseph Bonaparte was married here in 1820.

Cemetery
The churchyard dates to the congregation's place in the American Revolution. The church counts those buried to include


 * A signer of the Constitution of the United States
 * 3 Continental Congress attendees
 * 2 colonial printers
 * Over 200 Revolutionary War soldiers
 * 1 Tory
 * Ringer of the Liberty Bell
 * 9 members of the Carpenter's Company of Philadelphia

The cemetery also includes medical doctors, lawyers, sea captains, silversmiths, stonemasons, tavern keepers, tradesmen, and everyday citizens from the Colonial era. The last interment in the churchyard was in 1958 for In Ho Oh, a murdered University of Pennsylvania student.

Notable burials

 * Jared Ingersoll (1749—1822), lawyer and statesman
 * Jonathan Dickinson Sergeant (1746-1793), politician - reinterred to Laurel Hill Cemetery in 1878
 * Joel Barlow Sutherland (1792—1861), U.S. Congressman

Current activity
Old Pine is now the only remaining Presbyterian building in Philadelphia from before the American Revolutionary War.

Continuing its more than 200 years of community activism, Old Piners were among the first to respond to the problem of the homeless. In 1982, it founded and, in the beginning, sheltered the Philadelphia Committee for the Homeless. In 1978, Old Pine started its Saturday for Seniors (SFS) program to provide a weekend hot lunch and take-home snack for the city's elderly—a Philadelphia first. With no charge and no means test, SFS has become a vital weekend home for more than 100 older people from all over the city. Old Pine continues its commitment to serve the poor in the 21st century. The congregation participates in a local Habitat for Humanity project in the Point Breeze neighborhood of Philadelphia, joining with other Presbyterian congregations to jump-start development there and in surrounding blocks. In addition, it sends members to communities impacted by natural disasters: the Gulf Coast to help the clean-up and rebuilding effort in the wake of Hurricane Katrina; flooding disasters in Huntington, West Virginia and Towanda, Pennsylvania; Bayville, New Jersey after Hurricane Sandy.