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[https://omeka.religiousecologies.org/files/original/0b734ba694e373277d878357bcd7b380f0851204.jpg USCoRB] indicated that in 1926 there were 116 in fellowship (50 men, 66 women) including 6 S.S. teachers presiding over 55 children (for a total of 171). The Hall was valued at $14,000 with $3,200 owed (and with $2,403 in annual expenses), and $708 was additionally spent towards the Lord's work that year.
=Peterson/Rodgers history=
[[Pennsylvania history]]: "In 1906, a group of Christians who had been commuting in to town from the suburbs began meeting as the Ardmore Assembly in the Merion Title Building. A year or so later they moved to Bryn Mawr and became known as the Bryn Mawr Assembly. The believers met for years in the reading room over the public library. Mr. Cesare Patrizio was commended from the assembly in about 1918, and Oswald MacLeod in 1928. Others have been commended to the Lord’s work at home and abroad since that time. The preacher James Marshall made the Bryn Mawr assembly his home assembly for many years.
A new building was erected in 1923, the Bryn Mawr Gospel Hall, which is still used today. Some of the names from that time are Samuel Martin, Hugh Clark, Harry Iolitt, Robert Irvine, King Irvine, William Goldsmith, William Oliver, and Charles Dautle. Two expansions to the building have been made since the original, the first in 1975, and the most recent in 1994.
One of the interesting things about the Bryn Mawr assembly was the large number of men and women who worked in the private estates in various capacities. The weekly prayer meeting was on Friday evening to accommodate these folks. Another feature of those days was that the prayer meeting at Bryn Mawr was almost as large as the morning meeting. The Bryn Mawr assembly sponsored an annual Thanksgiving Conference for many years."
=Locations=