
Location
1779 Bailey Bridge Road, Limestone, TN 37681 in the community of Asbury
History
The Asbury United Methodist Church has consisted of several buildings in its history. The first church is thought to have been built near the site of the present church before 1900. The present church was completed on Oct. 30, 1955 and dedicated on April 24, 1960. This meant that the church was paid for "in full."
The church for many years was a member of a two point charge composed of the Limestone Church. Finally in 1969, the Asbury Church after being a station church for several years, was put with the Mt. Wesley Church. Since that time they have continued to work together. Many projects including the Lord's Acre project is done with the sister church.
Pastors, incomplete
Reid S. Wilson
Mack A. Houston
Priscilla Bryan
1955
1971
1993
Cemetery
Source: 1971 Asbury United Methodist Church Directory; 1993 Directory of Asbury United Methodist Church .

Location
1904 Jamestown Rd., (at the intersection of Triangle and Jamestown Rds, off Cherokee Rd), Johnson City ,TN 37604
History
Cherokee Methodist Church grew out of the consolidation of Speedwell, College Heights and Miller's Chapel Churches. Groundbreaking ceremonies were held on 17 Aug 1958. A parsonage was purchased in 1967 with Taylor's Memorial Methodist Church. In 1969 the mortgage on the church was paid. The church was remodeled and dedicated on May 17, 1970. On Nov. 1, 1981 a groundbreaking ceremony took place for the multi-purpose Family Christian Center which was added to the rear of the sanctuary.
Activities
In October 1960, members of the Church worked hard to pay off the mortgage. They raised an acre of sugar cane on the land near the church. E.S. Taylor plowed the ground and 12 women planted the seed. In the Fall and after regular working hours, the men stripped leaves and tops from the cane and cut it. An old-time molasses evaporator and a large galvanized pan were borrowed from Spencer Barnett, a Baptist friend. They also borrowed a two-roller cane grinder from Joe Huffine. Work lasted about a week. No recipe for making the molasses was necessary, because most of the people were born and raised knowing the process. L.D. Dishner furnished the tractor to grind the cane. As the cane stalks were fed into the grinder, the juice was squeezed into a tub covered with a coarse cloth for straining. The juice was strained again before being poured into the pan for boiling. During the boiling process, men and women skimmed the molasses with long-handled ladles with seive-like paddles. About three hours were needed for one boiling. The pan neld nearly 50 gallons of juice which boiled down to approximately 7 gallons of sorghum. Women worked in the church kitchen pouring sorghum into jars and making it ready for sale. The women also prepared meals for all the workers. The cane patch yielded 75 gallons of delicious molasses. Members made molasses for the next four years.
Charter Members
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Pastors
- Bacon, John Y.
- Sproul, James Renfro
- Fritts, Robert E.
- Houston, Mack
- Campbell, S. Lee
- 1958-59
- 1960-61
- 1962-64
- 1965-68
- 1969-1971
- Adcox, James
- Jenkins, James
- Pardue, Robert
- Petty, Raymond
- Humphrey, Richard A.
- 1972-73
- 1974-76
- 1977-78
- 1979-81
- 1982-83
Location
The College Heights Church was near the East Tennessee State Normal School, "just up the hill a piece from the school." The Church is now used as a two-unit apartment residence on the corner of College Heights Dr. and Southwest Ave. with its small cemetery along side.
History
The Journal of the 81st Session of the Holston Conference of the Methodist Church, Oct. 15-19, 1924 recorded that a mission known as the Normal Heights Church had been established at Johnson City. The church was dedicated on July 11, 1926. The church's name was changed to the College Heights Methodist Church because the Normal School, by an act of the Tennessee State legislature changed the school name to East Tennessee State Teacher's College in 1925.
The Methodist Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church, South merged in 1939.
The last funeral to be held in the church before the merger was that of Rev. W.G. Lee.
Pastors
- Harshbarger, W.Z.
- Matney, Green W.
- Watkins, John
- Harrell, Dillard L.
- Dobbs, Cicero
- Ramsey, P.E.
- Jackson, Frank Y.
- Crowder, I.G.
- Ferguson, C.H.
- Lee, W.G.
- February, Frank
- Wilson, Reid
- 1924-1926
- 1927-1934
- 1934
- 1935-1937
- 1938
- 1938
- 1939
- 1940-1942
- 1943
- 1944
- 1945, 1954
- 1946
- Lee, W.G.
- Steffner, Ed B.
- Allgood, C.B.
- Kilgore, L.E.
- Barthlomew, Charles
- Green, James R.
- Wampler, George
Church Closed. Members moved to Speedwell Church
- 1947, 1949
- 1948
- 1950-1951
- 1952
- 1953
- 1955
- 1956-1957
- 1958

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Charter Members
Cemetery The cemetery is beside the church.
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Location
4026 Highway 81 S, Jonesborough, TN 37659
History
The church was organized before 1900 and affiliated with the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. The first building was in Old Embreeville on the road that runs along the river on property belonging to the Embree Iron Company. The Company built the present building and used it as a community center as well as a church. A deed for the church property was not acquired until 1942 when the Embree Iron Company began selling all of their property in Embreeville. P.E. Watson, E.C. Cline and Mrs. L.L. Renfro were the trustees and the property was acquired for $1.00. The first bell is still being used.
The church has belonged to the Speedwell Circuit, Nolichuckey Circuit, Bethesda-Eden-Embreeville Circuit.
Charter members
- Sallie E. Bales
- Charlie Blevins
- Maria Treadway
- Roxie Treadway
- William Treadway
- Fannie Tucker
- George Tucker
- P.E. Watson
- Hazen Yates
Ministers
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Posted 8 Nov 2005


Location
211 West Main Street, Jonesborough, TN 37659.
History
The Jonesborough United Methodist Church began in 1822 as a result of a revival series of prayer meetings in the home of a Mrs. Brown, held by R.W.H. Hill, a merchant of Huntsville, Alabama. The history of Methodism in Jonesborough actually dates earlier than this. There were Methodists in the area who had meetings in their homes prior to the organized church. After the revival, Jonesborough was made an appointment in the Holston District of the Tennessee conference. One of the most famous of the converts was Elbert F. Sevier, a grandson of General John Sevier, who gave up a promising legal practice to become a Methodist preacher.
The second session of the Holston Annual conference was held in Jonesborough on October 20, 1825. Every year since Jonesborough has been listed in the appointments as Jonesborough Circuit or Station. Shortly after this date a brick church building with brick floors and rough slabs for seats was erected in the southeastern part of town. The fifth session of the Holston Annual Conference met in Jonesborough in 1828.
In 1833, Jonesborough and Kingsport became a two-point circuit. Time marched on and about 1845, work began on the present sanctuary. The lot was purchased for $600.00 and the cost of the building was about $4,000.00; both were large sums for that day. The undertaking was a huge task for the congregation of less than one hundred members. We know for certain that the building was completed in 1847 because the First Quarterly Conference record is still available.
The outward appearance of the Church was similar to that of today except for two chimneys on each side of the sanctuary permitting four stoves for heating. Within the sanctuary was a balcony for the use of the slaves and free blacks. The records of 1849 indicate that there were 54 white and 8 black members in the Sunday School and 75 white and 47 black church members. The present windows, pews and choir loft were later additions. There were no Sunday School rooms except in the basement, which was entered from an outside door only.
In 1875, the steeple was remodeled from a four sided structure to the present eight sided spire. The bell, which was placed there soon after the Civil War, remained in the steeple and has the inscription "Cast by Vanduzzen & Tift Buckeye Bell Foundry, Cincinnati, 1866."
The stairway to the balcony was removed and two Sunday School rooms were built beneath the balcony, One on each side of the entrance. The box pews were replaced with curved pews and a crude central heating system was installed in the basement.
New windows were installed in 1892, otherwise there were few structural changes in the building. The present windows were installed in 1928. In April 1948, an extensive restoration and redecorating project was completed. This included new plaster throughout, complete rewiring and lighting, painting, new pews, carpeting, pulpit furniture and additional classroom space in the basement. A new crystal chandelier was imported from Czechoslovakia, before the beginning of hostilities of World War II in Europe. The cost of the chandelier was $1,200.00. In 1972, the tower chime system was installed. In 1959, an educational unit was built to the front of the sanctuary. One major change was made in the sanctuary at this time, the addition of a choir loft at the front. Previously, the choir had been in the corner to one side of the pulpit. A stained glass window was given by Mr. Rollin Britton in memory of his wife, which was placed in the front of the sanctuary.
In 1966, the adjoining property was purchased to provide more adequate parking space. In 1904, the end apartment of the historic "Three Sisters' Row Apartments" was purchased for $1,050.00 to be used as a parsonage until 1950. A parsonage was purchased on Locust Street from 1950-1971. In 1971, the new parsonage on Allison Drive in North Jonesborough was completed.
Following the north-south split in the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1844, the Methodist Church in Jonesborough became a part of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. After the Civil War, northern ministers took control of the church as a result of an unpaid lien against the property. The "southern" congregation then held services in the Washington County Courthouse. In 1870, the dispute was settled in court and the southern group recovered possession of the property. In the years following, the church continued to grow, and in 1987 had 491 members.
Source: History of Washington County, Tennessee, 1988 ,by the Watauga Association of Genealogists-Upper East Tennessee, p.81.
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From the files of the Holston Conference of the Methodist Church Archives, Kelly Library, Emory & Henry College, Emory, VA. |

Location
877 Mayberry Rd. Jonesborough, TN.
History
Vincent United Methodist Church was organized in 1896 and services were held in the old Mayberry School, located across the road from the present church building. After a short life as the Mayberry Methodist Church, the congregation affiliated with the Methodist Episcopal Church September 30, 1898. The property was given to the church by George W. and Nancy May and Madison and Sarah Loyd. The property included both May and Loyd parcels for the church and a May parcel for the cemetery. Much of the building materials were transport on men's shoulders from the closed Lebanon Presbyterian Church on Taylor Bridge Road, because the dirt road was too muddy and gulled for horses and wagons. Materials from the Old Dutch Meeting House was also used in the construction of the building.
The donors sentiments as stated in the deed were that they "all and each were anxious to have a Methodist Church," and their dream was fulfilled when they obtained and submitted to the Episcopacy letters of Support from the former Lebanon Presbyterian Church and Old Dutch Meeting House officers, which were also in the community. Trustees for the newly formed body were G.W. Swingle, Mose Bailey and A.J. Loyd. No records exist of charter membership.
The present church building was erected in 1899 and the congregation assumed the name, Vincent Methodist Episcopal church, perhaps after one of the early preachers. Vincent Methodist Episcopal Church became Vincent United Methodist Church following the merger of the Methodist Protest Church, the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church South in 1939. Before 1939, the church was on the Telford Circuit and afterwards on the Nolichucky Circuit. Vincent became a single charge in 1989. In August 2005, the name was changed again to Mayberry Community Methodist Church.
Ministers
- 1923-1929 E.G. Browning
- 1929-1934 C.R. Cline
- 1934-1935 E.U. Yankee
- 1935-1936 Charles Mchaffey
- 1936-1937 Fred Rowe
- 1937-1938 S.A. Hopper
- 1938-1940 T.E. Goodman
- 1940-1941 F.Y. Jackson, Jr.
- 1942-1943 M. Guy Fleenor
- 1943-1948 Ogleva Street
- 1948-1950 Lewis J. Turner
- 1950-1952 Stanley Humble
- 1952 W.M. Bull
- 1953-1955 John K. McDonald
- 1955-1960 Wallace Chappell
- 1960-1962 Kenneth Henderlight
- 1962-1964 Charles Lynholm
- 1964-1966 P.A. Hawkins
- 1966-1969 J.E. Harris
- 1969-1972 Billy Joe Hawk
- 1972-1976 Carol R. Cowan
- 1976-1982 Glen Milburn
- 1982 W. Darrell Ross
- 1982-1989 Lewis Weaver
- 1989-1991 James Walter
- 1991-1992 James E. Smith
- 1992-1994 Charles Armes
- 1994-1997 Garland Thayer
- 1997- John Hitechew
Cemetery The cemetery is in good shape. GPS location: 36.12.34N 082.29.56W
Source: files of the Holston Conference of the Methodist Church Archives, Kelly Library, Emory & Henry College, Emory, VA., 2005.

Location
Corner of Hwy 11E and McCarty Church Rd., Jonesborough, TN.
History
In 1821 Philip McCardle (whose granddaughter, Eliza, married Andrew Johnson, future President of the United States) deeded one acre of ground to Henry Ruble, Isaac Hair, John G. Ruble, and Robert Paine, trustees, to be used for a Methodist Episcopal church and cemetery. Subsequently a log structure was built on the site. The log church building was also used as a school for many years. Originally, the church was known as McCardle's Meeting House, but over the years the name became "McCarty." In 1866, a frame church building was erected. During the early years, ministers held services at the church on the first Sunday of each month.
Early Members
Trustees of McCarty Methodist Church in the late 1890's were William R. Murr, George W. Murr, John Cloyd, L.W. Simpson, Aaron Croyle and Charley Stayer. Surnames found on the church roll during the 1880's and 1890's include: Armentrout, Brown, Moore, Marsh, Ling, Longmire, Long, Lovegrove, Jones Croyle, Cloyd, Miller, Murr, Patton, Stayer, Simpson, Rogers, Pritchard, Mongold, Collins, Self and Simmerman.
Cemetery
Information about the Old cemetery and New cemetery is in the cemetery section.
Reference: History of Washington County Tennessee 1988, by the Watauga Association, p.80.
Location
Spice Hollow Road
History
The founders first met in the tool shop of John Roe. In 1939 Oscar Miller donated a lot where a small frame church was built.
Plans for the merger of Speedwell, College Heights and Miller's chapel began during 1955. The church building was given to the Miller's Chapel Baptists in 1957, since they did not own the land. The deed stated that the land would be returned to the Oscar Miller family when it was not longer used as a church.
The Methodist membership continued to worship at Miller's Chapel until Jan. 1959 when the Cherokee Methodist Church was opened. The original Miller's Chapel building is no longer standing.
Families
The first congregation consisted of: Rev. G.W. Lee, Sam Crowe, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Dave (Norie) Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Henderson Hodge, Mr. and Mrs. Alec Bryant, Mr. and Mrs. John Roe and children. Other families of the congregation included: Cecil and Lena Stinson, Georgia Keene, Ben Huffine, Earnest Shew, Wiley Reed, Wiley Harris, James Strickland, Harry Scott, Earl and Edna Richardson, Robert and Jewel Stinson, Howard and Grace Harris, and Mrs. Eva Roe, a charter member.
Pastors
- Dail, W.H.
- Street, Ogleva
- Lee, W.G.
- Fritts, R.E.
- Mason, Frank G.
- February, Frank
- Wilson, Reid
- Traubaugh, Robert
- Allgood, C.B.
- 1939
- 1940-42
- 1941, 1946-49
- 1943
- 1944
- 1945, 1954
- 1946
- 1947
- 1950-51
- Kilgore, L.E.
- Arnold, James T.
- Green, James R.
- Wampler, George
Given to Baptist Church
Members to Cherokee Methodist
- 1952
- 1953
- 1955
- 1956-57
1958
1959

Location
586 Mount Wesley Road, Telford, TN
History
The first church, 20 - 25 feet square, was built in 1882 and was called Slemons Hill. In 1900 or 1901 a larger building was constructed and the name was changed to Mount Wesley by the Holston Conference. However, it was called "The Hill" for many years.
It was first known as the Jonesborough Circuit and later changed to the Telford Circuit in 1919 consisting of eight churches. Mt. Wesley was first organized as the Methodist Episcopal Church before the merger with the Southern Methodist Church in 1939. In 1943 it became a six point charge.
The present structure was begun in July 1953 and the first service was held on 30 May 1954.
In 1969 the Methodist and the United Brethren Churches merged to form the United Methodist Church and Mt. Wesley was placed on a two point charge with Asbury.
Ministers
- George Cox
- D.L. Howell
- A.C. Ketron
- T.H. Conner
- S.A. Hopper
- Rev. Shoupe
- Rev. McDonald
- D.L. Howell
- Rev. Gillespie
- T.E. Goodman
- Charles Mahaffey
- Fred Rowe
- Harold Harris
- W.E.O. Robeson
- Walter Gates
- E.M. Trammel
- M.F. Goss
- Joe Dew
- Raymond Geisler
- W. Ray McDougle
- Harold Ray
- Robert Tickle
- Newton Dickens
- Luther Lawson
- Edd Clawson
- Oral Lingerfelt
- Mack Houston
- Elmer Cleek
- Arnold Williams
- Woodrow Banks
- Sheridan Buck
- Albert Ailor
- E.B. Jeffers
- Lenoir Culbertson
- Randall Walters
- James Walter
- Michael Sluder
- Pricilla Bryan
Cemetery
Located at 586 Mount Wesley Road, Telford, TN. Cemetery is well kept and quite large. For more information, see the Cemetery Section.
Source: 1993 Directory of Mt. Wesley United Methodist Church .
Location
Ten miles northwest of Jonesborough in the 17th District.
History
About 1846, Dr. Richard Baskett was passing by and saw a light on the site of the present church. Realizing it was a good location for a church, he suggested that one be built here. The first church building was log. Later, a frame building was erected and used until 1956. In that year, Lina Bailey and her son, Leonard, donated more land and a brick building was constructed.
Ministers
The Reverend William Milburn was one of the early ministers.
Early Members
The first member was Nancy Stuart, wife of Aaron Keys. Descendants of the Keys and Stuart families are still on the church roll. The first trustees of the original log church were: William Walker, Richard Baskett, Aaron Keys, John Mahoney, and Isley Fraker. In 1905, the congregation included families with the following surnames: Bailey, Baskette, Bowman, Brown, Clark, Cochran, Dougherty, Eads, Ealey, Hartman, Harris, Jones, Keys, Martin, McMackin, Mitchell, Musselman, Rodgers, Sellers, Shields, Stafford, Stuart, Walters and White.
Cemetery
Information about the Pleasant Grove Methodist Cemetery is in the Cemetery Section.
Reference: History of Washington County, Tennessee 1988 compiled by the Watauga Association of Genealogists, page 81-82
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Source: In the Footsteps of Faith: a Tour of 14 of Johnson City's Century-old Churches, September 2005. Posted 8 Nov 2005 | |
Location
Between Cherokee Road and Cherokee Creek on the left, just below the point where Buncombe Hill Road enters Cherokee Road, Jonesboro.
History
In 1855 William Walters donated the land to Daniel Huffine, John Walter, Robert O'Donald, George Walter, Jesse Slagle, Jacob May and Joseph Leonard. (Deed Book 35, p. 7-9) for a Methodist Episcopal Church South to be built. Sam Walter laid the foundation. The church was built of logs supplied by the Walter family.
The church was on the Erwin Mission in the Jonesboro District in 1889-1890. In 1891 the church and mission were placed in the Morristown District until 1939.
Sometime during the period of the log church, a black preacher named Barnet Cummins from Jonesboro came to preach. While he was there Maj. J.W. Weeks was converted and became one of the early leaders of the church. Preacher Cummins preached until he was 104 yrs. old.
In 1905 the log church was taken down and Fay Andes sawed logs into boards for the new church. Controversy arose over a Williams pump organ to be used in the church. Will Walter did not think they should have an organ in the church, consequently he never stepped foot into the church again. Samual Walter was the song leader, followed by Oscar Walter. Nola Shell France was the church's first organist in 1906. The next two organists were Evelyn Weeks Miller and Etta Walter Martin.
The last official worship service was held in July 7, 1957. The following Sunday, the members were in the Cherokee Methodist Worship Service with members from the College Heights Methodist Church. They continued to worship in the Speedwell Church building as the Cherokee Methodist Church until the new building at 1904 Jamestown Road was completed. The old building was sold to Lowell Ellis for $2500 and made into two apartments.
Cemetery
The cemtery is one of the oldest on the eastern side of Washington County.
Members
Families that formed the early membership were the: Andes, Bennett, Huffine, Leach, Shell, Slagle, Stinson, Walter and Weeks families. Some of these people came into the church from the Mount Carmel Methodist Episcopal Church, South.
Pastors
- Most pastors served one - two years.
- Walker, Edward W.
- Crumley, F.D.
- Cross, J.B.
- McConless, Samuel A.
- Evans, W.P.
- Stewart, R.A.
- Cross, J.B.
- Sharp, W.D.
- Hendricks, W.A.
- McCracken, David
- Flogleman, W.I.
- Sampson, G.W.
- Walker, Newman
- Browning, William E.
- Waysor, M.J.
- Stevenson, M.A.
- Martin, Paul P.
- Lundy, Clyde Enoch
- Bellamy, T.M.
- Cline, C.R.
- Henly, Josephus
- Dailey, Archer N.
- 1889, first pastor
- 1890-1891
- 1892-1897
- 1898
- 1899-1900
- 1899-1900
- 1903
- 1904
- 1905
- 1906
- 1907
- 1908
- 1908 -1910
- 1911
- 1912-1913
- 1914
- 1915
- 1916-1917
- 1918-1919
- 1920-23; 1927-28
- 1924
- 1925
- Mitchell, J.S.
- Williams, C.W.
- Morris, Francis Benthall
- Tate, W.L.
- Yankee, E.H.
- Harris, Ray
- Smith, John N.
- Jackson, Frank Y. Jr.
- Fleener, M. Guy
- Street, Ogleva
- Turner, Lewis J.
- Humble, Stanley
- Bull, William M. Jr.
- Wampler, George
- Bacon, John Y.
- Church closed.
- Members moved to Cherokee Methodist Church.
- 1926
- 1929
- 1930
- 1931-1932
- 1933
- 1934-1938
- 1939-1940
- 1941
- 1942-1943
- 1944-1947
- 1948-1949
- 1950-1951
- 1952-1955
- 1956
- 1957-1958
- 1959
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Location
1775 Old State Rt. 34, Telford, TN 27690
History
The church at Telford was first known as the Methodist Episcopal Church founded in the mid-1800s. The original building was a large wooden structure with two doors on the front. It was lost to a fire in the early 1950's. Many of the church records were lost in this fire and could not be replaced.
The first service in the new church was held on May 18, 1952. Pastor M.F. Gross, District Superintendent Rev. Woody Stone, and bishop Roy H. Short were present and participated in that first service in the new building. The land in which the original and the present structure stand was a gift. The contractor for the structure was Richard Ellis Sr. who worked close with the building committee of Guy Wiseman, Horace Hartman, Sr., Robert Hunt Sr, Guy Maloney, J.L. Murr, Roy Mauk and E.O. Shanks.
The current name of Telford United Methodist Church was adopted in 1958 when the Methodist Episcopal Church united with the Evangelical Brethren Church. Through the years Telford United Methodist Church has been a beacon in the community. As progress was made in evangelism notable additions were required &endash; a new fellowship hall on the west end of the building, the paving of the parking lot, and a new front entrance with a handicap ramp.
There has been an association and alignment with a number of other churches in the area to form "charges" for shared pastors. The last charge was a two-point charge with new Victory United Methodist Church, which ended in 1996. Other churches that Telford has been on "charges" with are Limestone, McCarty, Mt. Wesley and others.
Telford United Methodist church has an active youth program and active membership. One of the most active groups is the "Keenagers" which is comprised primarily of senior citizens, however, everyone is invited. This group meets the third Thursday of each month for a meal and fellowship and to work together on church projects. The membership, as of September 16, 2000, is 160.
Source: Files of the Holston Conference of the Methodist Church Archives, Kelly Library, Emory & Henry College, Emory, VA, 2004.
"J.J. Yearger and J.R. Hughs in 1868, in my presence, got Josiah Earnest to fix deed to Earnest Chapel Church, it merged into Methodist Church at Telford Depot."
Source: John Fain Anderson Collection, 1796-1938 (b. 1844), East Tennessee State University, Archives of Appalachia, Box 70295, Johnson City, TN 37614-0138

Location
The church is eight miles north of Jonesborough near Sulphur Springs and Fall Branch.
History
The Valley View United Methodist Church began as a mission church in an open-air service in front of a country grocery store, Hartman Center, in 1945. The 36x50' building is a cinder block construction, plastered and painted white which seats 200. Stained glass memorial windows complete the church.
Rev. George Atkinson preached the guiding sermon on a September Sunday in 1945 while he was serving the Sulphur Springs area. The first service was the outcome of a growing feeling by Rev. Atkinson from his visits with many of the homes of the community and their inaccessibility to any nearby church.
After the initial service, the circuit minister announced that a Sunday School would be organized the following Sunday in a 150 yr. old log building a few hundred yards away. The log house had been used for storing tobacco. Fifty-three attended the first Sunday School in October 1945 and grew to an average attendance of 65 with as many as 81 being present at times. Shortly after the Sunday School started, Rev. Atkinson held a well attended revival in the log structure. Eleven converts were announced.
For a time, two Sunday School classes were held in the home of Mrs. Bessie Hartman across the road from the old log building. Mrs. Hartman gave one-half acre for the church and an additional quarter acre was purchased. The new church was built on the Bob Hartman farm near the old log building.
The new church building was entered into on Nov. 10, 1946.
Members
Charter Members in 1946 included:
- Earl Cloyd
- Mrs. Earl Cloyd
- Mrs. Jay Cooter
- Mrs. Mattie Gray
- Mrs. Bessie Hartman
- J.W.S. Hartman
- Mrs. Ruth Reed
- Bobby Sarver
- Mrs. Oscar Shelton
- Mr. Charles Stafford
- Mrs. Charles Stafford
Pastors
- George Atkinson
- M.C. Philippi
- James Henry
- O.C. Wright
- R.R. Haynes
- Bishop J. Chestain
- Frank Mason
- 1945-48
- 1948-50
- 1950-52
- 1952-54
- 1954-56
- 1957-58
- 1958-61
- Bob Smith
- Hershal Davidson
- Ben Barnes
- Robert E. Clark
- -----
- Virgil Booker
- Andrew Greer
- 1961-
- 1962-65
- 1965-69
- 1969-71
- 1971-74
- 1974-81
- 1981-87
Submitted by Elaine Cantrell, P.O. Box 1131, Jonesborough, TN 37659.