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Historic Yaphank Presbyterian Church Destroyed in Fire

Written by Lyndsay McCabe  |  08. December 2013

An investigation is currently underway to uncover the cause of a fire that ripped through a historic Yaphank church early Sunday morning.

According to the Suffolk County Police Department, the Main Street church, which is over 160 years old, caught fire at around 2 a.m.  Firefighters said that the fire started in the back of the church, where it rapidly tore through the building all the way to the steeple.  The inside of the church was engulfed in flames, and the back of the building was gutted.

The intensity of the fire and billowing smoke made it impossible for firefighters to enter the building.  They were further hindered by power lines that made it difficult to climb ladders to get to the top of the church.

No one was in the building at the time of the fire.

The pastor told officials that graffiti was found on the back of the building prior to the early morning fire, but it was determined that the graffiti incident was unrelated to the fire, and the cause of the fire was deemed to be non-criminal.

Later that morning, churchgoers of Yaphank Presbyterian Church were unable to return to their place of worship, but instead used the nearby community center for church services.

The Yaphank Presbyterian Church was built sometime in the late 1700s, according to church and county records, and the present building was built as a chapel in 1851.

[Source: Suffolk County Police Department, Yaphank Presbyterian Church]

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