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Evangelical Congregational Church Counties (2010) [ Metro Areas | States ]
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The Evangelical Congregational Church was formed by members of the United Evangelical Church who did not approve of the merger of that church with the Evangelical Association in 1922 to form the Evangelical Church, which is now a constituent part of the United Methodist Church.

Using data from the 1980-2010 Religious Congregations and Membership Studies, this list ranks U.S. counties on the highest total number of adherents and the highest percent of the population in the Evangelical Congregational Church. You can sort the list by clicking on the column headings.

Congregational "Adherents" include all full members, their children, and others who regularly attend services. "Percent" is the percentage of the total population that belongs to that denomination. Note: Adherents are sometimes residents of a county different than the location of their congregation.

[ More information on the data source ]

Complete List

Ranking County   [Download CSV]AdherentsPercent
19 Adams County, Pennsylvania
61
0.06
24 Anne Arundel County, Maryland
0
0
25 Baltimore County, Maryland
--
--
5 Berks County, Pennsylvania
3,109
0.76
25 Cambria County, Pennsylvania
--
--
3 Carbon County, Pennsylvania
552
0.85
3 Clarion County, Pennsylvania
341
0.85
24 Cook County, Illinois
0
0
11 Dauphin County, Pennsylvania
1,016
0.38
25 Franklin County, Ohio
--
--
25 Hancock County, Ohio
--
--
14 Henry County, Illinois
100
0.2
25 Hidalgo County, Texas
--
--
23 Lake County, Illinois
49
0.01
4 Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
4,301
0.83
2 Lebanon County, Pennsylvania
1,673
1.25
7 Lee County, Illinois
198
0.55
6 Lee County, Kentucky
48
0.61
10 Lehigh County, Pennsylvania
1,741
0.5
25 Luzerne County, Pennsylvania
--
--
20 Mahoning County, Ohio
110
0.05
16 Mercer County, Pennsylvania
183
0.16
17 Monroe County, Pennsylvania
250
0.15
18 Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
771
0.1
12 Northampton County, Pennsylvania
1,069
0.36
9 Northumberland County, Pennsylvania
487
0.52
21 Ocean County, New Jersey
180
0.03
18 Pike County, Pennsylvania
58
0.1
25 Richland County, Ohio
--
--
1 Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania
2,632
1.77
25 Seminole County, Florida
--
--
22 Stark County, Ohio
70
0.02
8 Stephenson County, Illinois
257
0.54
19 Summit County, Ohio
304
0.06
25 Tippecanoe County, Indiana
--
--
21 Trumbull County, Ohio
62
0.03
13 Venango County, Pennsylvania
118
0.21
24 Whiteside County, Illinois
0
0
22 Winnebago County, Illinois
68
0.02
15 York County, Pennsylvania
784
0.18


* In an effort to better match the ASARB standards for adherents, a few religious bodies changed the way their adherents were reported in 2010, including Amish groups, Friends groups, Jewish groups, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Non-denominational Christian Churches, and the United Methodist Church. This change does not affect any of the data in the newly released 2010 U.S. Religion Census: Religious Congregations & Membership Study. In fact, the data for these groups are now more comparable to that of other bodies than it was in previous decadal reports.

However, the change in methodology can distort assessments on growth or decline between 2000 and 2010 for each of these groups. County-level 2000 data using the new methodology are not readily available. ASARB staff has adjusted some 2000 county-level adherent statistics to allow for a more accurate picture on growth or decline. The revised maps and charts are now available on-line at www.usreligioncensus.org for those who are interested in these trends.

Source

2010 data were collected by the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB) and include statistics for 236 religious groups, providing information on the number of their congregations and adherents within each state and county in the United States. Clifford Grammich, Kirk Hadaway, Richard Houseal, Dale E. Jones, Alexei Krindatch, Richie Stanley and Richard H. Taylor supervised the collection. These data originally appeared in 2010 U.S. Religion Census: Religious Congregations & Membership Study, published by the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB). [More information on the data collection]