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By
Foster Ockerman, Jr. ockerman@kycounsel.com
Copyright
1988 Foster Ockerman, Jr.
Lexington,
Kentucky
Part
2 --
Chapters 5 - 9
to
History part 1
to
History part 3
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CHAPTER
FIVE
[history
table of contents]
THE YOUNG CHURCH
"Until the year 1820, the church in Lexington had been
small and feeble and services were held in a little dilapidated building at
the corner of Deweese and Short Streets, where a negro church now stands. In
that year a great revival was begun, following one held in Clark County, which
aroused much enthusiasm among Lexington Methodists who attended the meetings.
The revival in Lexington lasted through the years 1820 and 1821, during which
time many persons, both young and old, were added to its membership. It is a
peculiar fact that previous to this time there had been no young persons in
the society.... The revivals of 1820 and 1821 did much to overcome the minor
troubles that had divided the congregation a few years before, and with a new
life born into them were able to abandon their old quarters and erect a new
and commodious meeting house." Lexington Herald, 1915.
This newspaper report, written almost a century later and
eight years after the present limestone sanctuary had been erected, presents
an interesting view of the Lexington church of 1820. Certainly, the meeting
house at Short and Deweese would have suffered in comparison. Still, it was
becoming small for the congregation, now numbering 183 members of both races.
The issue of slavery was a major concern for both the Methodist Church and the
country. In Lexington, center of the slave-holding Bluegrass, more than a
third of the total members were black, probably due to the opposition of the
Methodist Church to slavery. The circuit, itself, claimed 1128 members.
Lexington, then, would account for more than sixteen percent of the total.
Kentucky as a whole contained some 16,000 Methodists.
Revivals were a continuing occurrence. Reference has been
made to a successful revival conducted by Rev. McDaniel in Georgetown the
previous year. In 1820, McDaniel was assigned to both the Lexington and
Georgetown churches, and he traveled between them. Harris was given charge of
circuit with two assistants. The Georgetown revival was not the only one which
increased the number of Lexington Methodists. Rev. B. T. Kavanaugh, one of
several preachers to come from that family, described another revival held at
Ebenezer, a small community six miles from Winchester on the road to
Lexington. Kavanaugh's family had been among the founders of the Ebenezer
Society in 1797. His account is a first person view and was given in a letter
to Dr. Albert H. Redford, author of the history of Kentucky Methodism:
"The church at Lexington received great aid from the
camp meetings held at or near Ebenezer. In 1819, the church at Lexington was
very small, and worshiped in a little illshaped house, far out in the east end
of town, which was afterwards sold as a cabinet shop. In the fall 1819 and
1820, the revival influence was carried from the camp-meetings at Ebenezer
into Lexington, by those who attended it; and the society there thus received
its first religious impulse toward a large and healthy growth. Previous to
that time, there was not a young person in the society - none when I joined
there. Old fathers Chipley, Chatton, Bryan, Gibbon, and a few others, were the
fathers of the church. In 1820 and 1821, the revival continued, and a great
many young people were brought into the Church."
In fairness to both Kavanaugh and the Lexington church, it
should be noted that the theme of his letter to Redford was the usually high
number of ministers who came from the Ebenezer society and its effect on other
societies. Lexington would not have been designated a station three times if
it was awaiting these revivals to gain strength. With that one note, however,
the rest of Kavanaugh's observations appear valid. Active young members are
necessary to a strong church, and if their absence had been a weakness in
Lexington, the problem was now corrected.
At this same time, and perhaps as an outgrowth of the
revivals, the church members helped to start and support a black mission which
still survives today as St. Paul A.M.E. Church on North Upper Street.
For the preceding eight years, Kentucky had been divided by
the national church between the Ohio and Tennessee Conferences. The General
Conference of 1820, taking notice of the great growth in the West, created the
Kentucky Conference, encompassing the entire state and adding thereto about
half of what is now West Virginia and a portion of middle Tennessee. The first
session of the new Kentucky Conference, fittingly, was held in Lexington in
1821.
The "small and feeble" meeting house in Lexington
was thought by some to be too small for such a momentous event and the Masons
offered their large lodge room for the meetings. The Methodists, however,
maintained that the small church was adequate for the Conference and declined
the offer
The Conference convened on September 18th, and fifty-nine
full members and thirty-seven ministers on trial attended. All three Methodist
Bishops, McKendree, Roberts and George, attended, and Bishop George opened the
first meeting. Some idea of the effective size of the meeting house is given
by the thought that it would be too small to hold one hundred people.
During Conference week, among other business, Nathanial
Harris was admitted to full connection, and the Conference agreed to join
forces with the Ohio Conference to start Augusta College on the Ohio River,
and Burwell Spurlock was appointed to the Lexington church.
Perhaps in response to the cramped conditions during the
Conference, the Lexington church purchased a lot on Church Street between
Upper and Mulberry (Limestone) streets in 1822. Reporting on the new church
built there and dedicated by Bishop Enoch George, the Lexington Morning
Transcript-Herald noted that the cost of construction was $5,000. It
described the new building as "a plain, well finished brick edifice,
measuring fifty by sixty feet. It held seventy-five pews on the ground floor,
and was provided with a gallery above" The size and configuration of the
pews is not known, but assuming an average of four people per pew, the new
church would accommodate at least three hundred worshipers.
The facade of the two storied structure was five bayed and
crowned by a parapet which projected on either side, supported by stone
brackets. The pulpit stood at the rear of the auditorium. The gallery was nine
feet deep along both the front and sides of the church and was supported by
nine square, reeded posts.
The congregation petitioned the Conference to return to
Lexington again, and it did in 1822, now housed in the larger church.
George C. Light was appointed to the Lexington pulpit. A
Virginia native, his family moved to Maysville while he was young, then to
Ohio, where Light was converted. He entered the ministry at age twenty, but
preached for only three years before locating in Ohio. Before returning to the
active ministry, Light farmed, taught school, acted as a surveyor, and even
served in the Ohio state legislature. Readmitted the year before his
appointment to Lexington, Light would serve the church for another forty
years. Bishop Redford knew Light personally, and praised him highly,
describing him as a much sought after preacher. "By nature an orator, and
brought up under the rugged scenes of western life, there was a boldness amid
his strokes of eloquence that invested his sermons with a beauty and power
that has seldom been equaled."
Light served Lexington at least one year. The records
consulted do not indicate how long his service here lasted, although Arnold
notes that about this time preachers began serving two years in one place. The
next reference found to a Lexington appointment is 1825, when Edward Stevenson
is sent to the brick building on Church Street.
Stevenson is an interesting touch of history. Born in Mason
County, Ky. in 1797, his father's cabin had been the site, in 1786, of what
Arnold describes as "the first prayer ever offered by a Methodist
itinerant at a family altar in Kentucky," by Benjamin Ogden. Converted at
age fifteen, Stevenson soon had occasion to deliver his first sermon at a
service in his father's cabin, and seven people were converted. His first
appointment as a traveling minister was to the Lexington circuit in 1820,
assisting Nathaniel Harris. After serving Lexington's pulpit, Stevenson would
continue to occupy the pulpits of most of the major towns and cities in
Kentucky, serving as book agent, head of the Methodist Publishing House in
Nashville, and finally president of Logan College.
In 1826, another Mason County native was appointed to
Lexington, Richard Corwine. Thirty-seven when he came to Lexington and only
nine years a preacher, Corwine appears to have been a dedicated but average
minister. In a classic example of loving but faint praise, Redford Demoralized
Corwine thusly:
"While he did not take rank in the pulpit as one of
the first preachers of the Conference, yet his talents were above mediocrity,
and he was always acceptable to the Church as a minister of the gospel. He
never preached what the world styles great sermons, but he never failed to
interest and instruct. His was not the flood of impassioned eloquence that
overlaps its banks and cares everything before it; but it was the gentle
stream that rolled smoothly within the limits assigned it, . . ."
However uninspired his preaching, Corwine must have had
other merits, for he appears to have stayed at Lexington for a second year;
either that or appeals to the Bishop for a change were unsuccessful. Lewis
reports that he led a notable revival at the church in 1827.
1828 saw the Methodist General Conference remove the
remnant of Tennessee from the Kentucky Conference, having removed the Virginia
portion four years earlier. The Kentucky Conference now contained just the
Commonwealth of Kentucky. The state conference this year approved the
publication of The Gospel Herald, which issued its first sixteen page
issue in August of 1829, from its offices in Lexington. The Conference also
appointed Richard Tydings to Lexington.
Tydings published a book in 1844 on apostolic succession,
to which he appended a sketch of his life. He introduced the sketch by saying
it was in compliance with the request of the Kentucky Conference that each
preacher prepare such a sketch to aid the Conference in memorializations. This
history is indebted to Bishop Roy Short for providing a copy of Tydings'
sketch. Tydings devoted almost five pages to his Lexington experience, mostly
describing experiences with certain individuals or families in the
congregation. However, he does provide interesting information about the
church and Lexington.
Born in Maryland on June 16, 1783, Tydings' parents joined
the Methodist Church while he was still a child. His family was deeply
religious and he received strong early training. However, his mother died,
apparently while he was in his early teens, and Tydings began to travel down
what he called "the broad beaten road that leads to everlasting
ruin." Fortuitously, when Tydings was about twenty, he found himself
sharing a room in Annapolis with a new convert. This other young man was
dedicated in his devotions, and soon Tydings rediscovered his earlier
religious feelings.
He served several churches in Maryland and Pennsylvania
before determining, in 1824, that he should move West. After consulting with
Bishops McKendree and Soul, he was transferred to the Kentucky Conference.
Tydings was apparently successful financially, although a thread of concern
over neglecting his family in favor of the church appears now and then. He had
purchased a parsonage in Maryland in 1814, and now on his arrival in Kentucky
in 1826, he mentions his farm in Bath County on which he built "houses"
for his wife and family, and servants. Tydings does say his father was a
slaveholder, but does not say whether his servants were slaves; they probably
were. Although the Methodist Church had not yet prohibited preachers to own
slaves, the question was a troubling one and was raised at each General
Conference. Tydings notes in reference to the 1828 General Conference that it
was not very pleasant and perhaps his feeling was due to the conflict slavery
presented.
His first appointment was to Maysville, about forty miles
from his farm. Although it was a large and promising congregation, at the end
of a year he had attracted few new members and, discouraged, requested a new
appointment. Whether he truly had grounds for discouragement, or had arrived
in the west with too high expectations, cannot be evinced from his narrative.
Tydings relates that he took over Lexington from Stephenson
"who immediately preceded me." Lewis does not indicate a change in
ministers in 1827, nor does Arnold mention a new Lexington appointment for
that year. However, in view of Tydings' first person account, either
Stephenson was reappointed to Lexington after Corwine in 1827, or Corwine's
performance was so lackluster that Tydings mistakenly overlooked him.
In any event, Tydings says that Stephenson had begun a
great revival which Tydings had the privilege to continue until he left for
the General Conference on May 1, 1828. On his return, despite good efforts
from local preachers Chipley and Cooper, he found the spirit had slackened.
Tydings attributes this not to his absence, but to the length of the effort
which wore out people and preachers alike. Soon after his return, the
Lexington church was "refreshed again with manifestations of divine
goodness."
Tydings also notes that through the elderly preacher's own
request, Leroy Cole had been appointed to Lexington with Tydings for the first
year. Cole was born in 1749, and at this time was almost eighty years old.
When Cole was admitted into the traveling ministry in 1777, one year after the
Revolution began, there were only thirty-six itinerants in the country and
less than seven thousand Methodists. He preached in North Carolina during the
War, and was one of the first twelve elders, elected and ordained at the
Christmas Conference in 1784. He located several years later, came to Kentucky
in 1808, and settled with his wife in Clark County. From 1814 to 1816, Cole
again traveled circuit, before retiring once more. Now in 1828 he requested an
appointment for a year.
Cole explained his desire for another church, as old and
worn out as he was, by telling a story of a pair of oxen. Both worked under
the same yoke for many years until one died. The other continued to go stand
by the cart each day. "Brethren, said he, I am now old, and cannot work
much; but still, I want to stand by the cart." Lexington's church
undoubtedly benefited greatly by this one year's exposure to a man whose life
reads like that of the early church, writ small.
"In beloved, and beautiful Lexington," Tydings
wrote, "we found many kind and hearty friends, as well in the Methodist
Episcopal Church as out of it." Among the individuals and their families
he describes are: Robert Wickliffe, "the widow Morrison . . . whose kind
husband left a large sum of money to Transylvania University," John L.
Martin, and Dr. Saterwhite. One episode is interesting for its commentary on
Lexington at this time:
"Lexington station contains many worthy members of the
church of Christ; one among them that now occurs to my mind I will now
mention, because of her undeniable, and useful Christian course. When she came
to reside in that city, she was young, handsome, and wealthy; and might have
turned to the gay world, and enjoyed all the earth could give. But, instead of
doing so, although the Methodists were few, poor and despised, she cast in her
lot with them, and has continued faithful until this day, . . ."
Tydings' ministry was apparently more successful in
Lexington than in Maysville for he reports he had the good fortune "to
receive a large number of souls, coloured as well as white into the bosom of
the church of God during my two year's labor in Lexington." He was also a
well read man, for he concludes this section of his autobiography by
paraphrasing the poet William Cowper: "Oh, Lexington, beautiful
Lexington, with all your faults we love you still"
The Kentucky Conference met at Lexington again in 1829, and
William Holman stayed in town as the new minister. A Shelby County, Ky.
native, Holman had established the first society in Frankfort and helped built
a church there in 1822. He had joined the Conference in 1816, and was an
active minister for fifty-one years. He spent the majority of his service in
Louisville where he organized the Broadway Church and Seaman's Bethel and
occupied the pulpit of every church in that city. His later accomplishments
show the strong energy and ability which he brought to Lexington during his
year here. The following year, Lexington would report at Conference that
Holman's annual salary of $200 had been paid in full.
The eloquent Rev. Light was reappointed to Lexington in
1830, followed in 1831 by William Adams. Adams traveled several circuits
during the eight years after his admission, including the Lexington circuit in
1821. He was appointed Presiding Elder in 1822 and served in that office until
his death in 1835, with the exception of this one year in the Lexington
pulpit. He is described as having a very strong mind, and as being highly
educated, especially in English literature.
Nothing has been found to indicate the Lexington
congregation had a particular problem at this time which required the intimate
attention of a presiding elder. Adams may simply have requested the
appointment to experience again the direct involvement of a stationed minister
after nine years as elder. If the Lexington church did have a problem, it
would once again have been the result of events in the national church.
For many years the power of the presiding elders had been
growing and a reform element among Methodist preachers nationally was pushing
for a change in the process of selecting the elders - from bishopric
appointment to election by the preachers. The 1820 General Conference voted to
require the bishops to nominate three times the number of elders needed, and
the preachers would then elect from among that pool of choices. However, when
a popular and newly elected bishop resigned over the change, enforcement of
the rule was suspended until the next General Conference.
At that meeting in 1824, the motion for enforcement failed
to pass. The reformers immediately sought to rally support for their position.
They began publishing a periodical called "Mutual Rights" and
organized twenty-four support societies in twelve states in three years. The
reaction of the church was to expel many of the reform ministers and their
followers. These people then formed the Associate Methodist Reformers and put
their grievances before the 1828 General Conference.
That Conference responded by agreeing to permit the
reformers to return on the condition that they abandon their position and
disband the societies. That was unacceptable. The reformers and their supports
formally left the church and formed the Methodist Protestant Church, rejecting
both concepts of presiding elders and the episcopacy. Whole congregations
switched churches and nationally over 100,000 Methodists joined the splinter
church.
This dramatic series of events would have been a topic of
much discussion when the Kentucky Conference met at Hill Street the following
year. Inevitably members of the congregation would have participated in some
of those discussions, especially as the visiting ministers were usually housed
with members. Even if the congregation harbored no support for the reformers,
they would have been curious about the controversy.
Again, there is no apparent evidence of any problems with
the Lexington church in connection with the reforms, the new denomination, or
otherwise, although the congregation had experienced two schisms in the past.
It just seems unusual that an elder of nine year's tenure would have been
assigned to a local church for a year in the midst of a denominational crisis
over the post of presiding elder, and then reappointed as elder for three more
years.
1831 was also the year Lexington was officially
incorporated as a city by act of the Kentucky General Assembly. The
legislation replaced the trustees with a mayor and twelve councilmen, granted
immunity from county taxes, and established a city court with the mayor as
judge. The same year, the first tie was laid for the Lexington & Ohio
Railroad. The goal was the Ohio River, not the state, and Louisville was to be
the terminus. Over $900,000 of company stock was sold in just five days. By
the first of 1834, the railbed had reached Frankfort and carried horse drawn
carriages holding forty passengers. The next year, steam powered engines would
reduce the travel time to two hours.
In the process of construction, the railroad company built
a fill in front of Col. John Francisco's farm and house in Woodford County.
The good colonel was so enraged at his blocked view, he sold his entire farm
to the railroad. Located about half way between Lexington and Frankfort, the
farm was a convenient stopping point. The directors build a small town Midway
- and named its streets after themselves.
John James, described by Short as a strong leader in the
Conference, was appointed to Lexington in the midst of the hotly contested
presidential election between Andrew Jackson and Henry Clay. Thirteen years
later, James would be a member of the Kentucky delegation to the meeting in
Louisville which organized the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.
1833 was the year of the cholera epidemic in Lexington,
when over 600 citizens died, more than ten percent of the total population.
That year, Hubbard Hinde Kavanaugh was given a two year appointment to the
Lexington church. Kavanaugh would later be elected bishop and play a major
role in the history of Kentucky Methodism.
Born in Clark County to Rev. and Mrs. Williams Kavanaugh,
H. H. Kavanaugh was one of four sons to become Methodist ministers. At
thirteen he was apprenticed to a printer in Paris, Kentucky. Two years later,
Kavanaugh was converted and soon desired to become a Methodist preacher. His
master, who was also a Presbyterian minister, generously released him from the
final two years of apprenticeship. Thirty-one years old when he came to
Lexington, almost half of his life to date as a preacher, Kavanaugh would
serve the church until his death in 1884. An adequate summary of his life and
church leadership is impossible in the confines of this history. It is
sufficient to say that the Lexington church was fortunate to have Kavanaugh in
its pulpit for two years.
In 1834, John Newland Maffit came to Lexington to conduct a
revival with Kavanaugh. Maffit was an extraordinary man, perhaps the first of
that breed of minister known as the professional evangelist.
He arrived in Kentucky the preceding year, and began a
series of almost continual revivals across the state. Arnold describes him as
". . . an enigma. That he was a very eloquent preacher, with a very
magnetic personality, and an unusual power over a congregation, cannot for a
moment be questioned. But these qualities were mixed with weaknesses and
glaring inconsistencies that greatly detracted from his ministry, and
constantly placed the man under suspicion and criticism."
While in Louisville, Maffit demanded total control over a
revival there. It shortly developed that he had persuaded the church members
to contract with him directly to preach two sermons per Sunday over a six
month period for the sum of $1,500! This, it should be remembered, at a time
when the Lexington church was paying its minister an annual salary of $200.
When the regularly appointed ministers attempted to reenter the pulpit, some
of the congregation actually hissed. The minister who had to reaffirm control
over his own church called Maffit ". . .a mystery I never could solve. He
certainly possessed rare talents as a speaker, and held his audiences under
more perfect control than any one I ever heard." Maffit soon left
Louisville for Lexington, and the congregation admitted that they had been led
astray.
One can imagine, then, both the great zeal and spirit of
the revival in Lexington and the tension and struggle for control between
Kavanaugh and Maffit. The Lexington paper noted that "the eloquent Maffit
conducted a revival here.... Immense audiences were entranced by his glowing
words, and many connected themselves with the Church." Maffit presented
certain dangers and temptations along with evangelical zeal. The Lexington
church benefitted from the latter, while avoiding, no doubt due to Kavanaugh,
the former.
The death of Benjamin Odgen was reported at the 1835
Kentucky Conference, meeting in Shelbyville. The issue of slavery, and where
the church stood, continued to grow in importance. The Conference reaffirmed
its opposition to slavery and its approval of gradual emancipation and
recolonization in Africa. No doubt the Lexington church, situate in a strong
slaveholding region and perhaps counting slave owners in its congregation, was
suffering over the issue as well.
Edward Stevenson returned for a third time to Lexington in
1837, establishing a record for separate appointments to the church. While
here, Stevenson staged a great revival which lasted over two months and
featured a return appearance by Maffit. Again, despite what Short called a
tendency to be too commercial and to manipulate situations and people to his
personal advantage, Maffit served the Lexington church well, bringing to the
altar one hundred and thirty converts as new members. Stevenson continued in
Lexington for the following year, the usual period of an appointment now being
two years.
Arnold makes the bold assertion that "perhaps no more
useful man even belonged to the Kentucky Conference than George W.
Brush," and this man was appointed to Lexington in 1839. Physically,
Brush "was of medium height, well-knit frame, fine open face, lighted up
by dark, fine eyes, above which rose the dome-like forehead, crowned with
steel-gray hair." Although only thirty-four when he came to Lexington and
therefore probably yet to obtain steel-gray hair, Brush already had a
reputation as a pastor/evangelist, one who could conduct great revivals and
win converts, then organize and train them in the church. It appears that his
preaching style, in contrast to the great pulpit eloquence of the day, was
more conversational and laced with humor, a style more modern. Its effect was
no less, however, and the Lexington church continued to grow during his
pastorate. Brush would be an active minister until his death in 1870. He was a
member of the delegation to the conference establishing the Methodist Church,
South.
Nineteen years before, the Lexington church was accounted
to consist of a small, and it would seem, aging group of believers, meeting in
an undersized and "ill shaped" house at the edge of town. From that
rude beginning, however, the congregation grew rapidly, building a new brick
church which, by 1839, they were outgrowing under the influx of new members.
It was time for another move, time for a bigger church perched on a hill
overlooking Lexington.
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CHAPTER
SIX
[history
table of contents]
CONTINUING STRUGGLE
Forty-one years previously, when the top of South Hill was
as remote from the center of activity in Lexington as the corner of Short and
Deweese, the German Lutheran Communion purchased a sixty-four foot by two
hundred and forty-four foot lot on Hill Street, located roughly halfway
between what are now Upper and Mill Streets. They raised the funds to purchase
the land and erect a story and one-half frame church by means of a lottery.
The building was used both as a church and as a schoolhouse for children of
the members, who were almost entirely German immigrants. Sometime during the
years they began using the rear portion of the lot for a graveyard. The site
looked down the hill over the tops of commercial buildings and across the
waters of Town Branch.
In about 1815, the building was destroyed by fire and no
replacement was ever built, although, evidently, the graveyard continued to
receive deceased members. The membership continued to dwindle over the years,
and by 1840, only one of the trustees was still alive. By 1883, the German
Lutheran Church in Lexington, established in 1795, was described as "long
since extinct."
The German Lutheran denomination had great difficulty in
graduating enough ministers from its German seminaries to supply the new
congregations being established in the United States by German immigrants. Not
infrequently, due to doctrinal similarities, German Lutherans joined Methodist
churches. It would appeal that in 1840 the few remaining members of the
Lexington German Lutheran Communion decided to join the Lexington Methodist
church and contribute their lot. Whether this admitted speculation is correct,
or the Methodist purchased this large lot overlooking the town, the Methodists
determined to erect a new church on the site. This lot is now under the
eastern portion of the main church building, and has been hallowed ground
since 1799.
Under the pastoral leadership of Rev. Brush, and without
question active leadership and work from members of the congregation, the
Lexington Methodists purchased this ground, and during 1840 and 1841, built
their new church. From this time, the congregation became known as the Hill
Street Methodist Church. (The appellation "First" would not come for
many years, requiring, of course, at least one other Methodist church to be
established and survive and, as history would have it, at least one other
Southern Methodist Church.)
According to Clay Lancaster, the new church "seems to
have been quite plain, with a three bay facade having a screen that rose above
the front gable. It was given 'overbuilding and redecorating' in 1874, and was
'handsomely improved' in 1883, the latter changes leaving its entrance almost
identical to that of the Second Christian Church on Constitution Street."
As this new construction was being completed, the Kentucky
Conference took a major step which no doubt affected Hill Street Church. The
Board of Trustees of Transylvania University offered to turn over to the
Conference control and administration of the Academic and Preparatory
Departments, while retaining the Schools of Law and Medicine. The plan was
that the Kentucky Conference would assume initial responsibility then the
national Methodist Episcopal Church would adopt it as its university. The
Kentucky Conference unanimously accepted the offer. The General Conference,
although it endorsed the idea, never completed its share of the arrangements.
Ultimately, when the national church divided North and South in 1844, this
Southern institution was left for the new Southern General Conference to
adopt. That was done in 1846. Unfortunately, internal dissensions,
denominational jealousies, and the failure of the other Conferences to
contribute sufficiently to its support, led the Southern Methodists to give
back control of Transylvania in 1848.
Transylvania, the first college west of the mountains, had
a troubled beginning. Prior to the Methodists, the Presbyterians, Baptists,
Episcopalians and Unitarians had all tried their l hands. Under the Methodist
administration of Dr. Henry B. l Bascom, Arnold reports, Transylvania had one
of its greatest 9 periods of prosperity. After Bascom took over, enrollment
increased by a factor of ten. Had the national church not divided l and the
resources of all Methodists been available, Transylvania might be a Methodist
university today.
During the eight years of Methodist control, however, the
University and Hill Street Church, situate on the two hills overlooking
Lexington and in sight of each other over the tops of trees and downtown
buildings, would work closely together. Bascom was a close friend of Henry
Clay, whose law office sat between the two on Mill Street, and one can imagine
Dr. Bascom walking down to Clay's office and the two men discussing the
University or Hill Street Church on their way to lunch.
In 1842, the Kentucky Conference returned to Lexington,
holding its meetings in the Old Medical Hall at Transylvania. No doubt the
Conference was interested in inspecting first hand this institution they had
taken under their care. During Conference, Dr. Bascom dedicated the new Hill
Street Church building.
Richard Deering was appointed to Hill Street for a two year
pastorate. Born in Greenup County, Ky., he was admitted as a minister in 1832,
traveling that year as an assistant to Richard Corwine on the Fleming circuit.
The two men conducted extended revivals that year, converting hundreds. During
his sixty years as a Methodist preacher, Deering would serve as presiding
elder of New Orleans and Louisville, as well as serving many churches and
circuits. In 1843, Deering conducted a revival in Lexington which added 195
new members to the roll of Hill Street Church.
The following year, 1844, stands as a monumental year in
American Methodist history. The long standing issue of slavery, which was
affecting almost every aspect of American life, produced in its religious life
a division of the Methodist Church. The northern church retained the name
"Methodist Episcopal Church," while the new division took the name
"Methodist Episcopal Church, South."
Kentucky fell within the borders of the southern
jurisdiction, and Hill Street followed the Kentucky Conference south.
Kentucky's delegates to General Conference which approved the division were:
H. B. Bascom, William Gunn, H. H. Kavanaugh, Edward Stevenson, B. T. Crouch
and George W. Brush. Kavanaugh and Stevenson had served the Hill Street
church; Brush occupied its pulpit in this year, and Bascom was presiding over
Transylvania. Kavanaugh was presiding elder of the Lexington District. Few
congregations in the country would have had as many delegates in so close
proximity to them to answer questions and concerns about the action of the
General Conference. Many Kentucky churches promptly mirrored the national
actions and divided into two churches, North and South. The presence of so
many southern church leaders in Lexington must have helped prevent a northern
split from Hill Street.
In this midst of these national events, Hill Street
Methodist Church sold its former location on Church Street for the sum of
$3,500. The early 1840's were economically difficult in Lexington, with an
increase in the number of bankruptcies and lawsuits. Many owners had to sell
their property at substantial losses. There is no direct evidence that Hill
Street Church had to sell its property; nor is there any evidence that they
had a use for it. However, a depression is not the ideal time to sell real
estate, and it may be presumed that the church had a greater need for the
proceeds from the sale then they did for the property.
Brush continued at Hill Street for 1845, the year Cassius
M. Clay began publication of his abolitionist newspaper, The True American,
in Lexington. The Kentucky Conference, South, met and divided the state
into two conferences: Kentucky and Louisville. The northern Kentucky
Conference continued as one region until the two groups merged back together
almost a century later.
William A. Hibbon was named to Hill Street for 1846,
followed by the return of H. H. Kavanaugh in 1847. In what appears to be the
first instance of an assistant pastor for the church, William H. Anderson was
sent to Lexington as well.
Anderson is described by Arnold, who knew him in his later
years, as scholarly, polished in manner, a thorough gentleman and an excellent
preacher. Admitted on trial in 1838 at the age of twenty-one, Anderson served
several churches including Frankfort, before coming to Transylvania as
professor of English in 1842. He worked there under Bascom until his
appointment to Hill Street. Later he would serve as president of no less than
four Methodist colleges, including Kentucky Wesleyan, as well as pastor to
many congregations during his fifty-five year ministry.
Kavanaugh held a revival in December of that year which
attracted the notice of the Lexington Observer. The newspaper reported
that there was "a gracious revival going on in the Methodist Church in
this city, and what adds no little interest, that it originated and is
principally confined to the students of our University." For the students
of Transylvania to generate revival services at Hill Street in this the next
to last year of Methodist administration of the school indicates better than
anything else the close relationship with the Hill Street Church.
John Miller came to Hill Street in 1848 for two years. Most
of the appointments in this period were for two years. Miller is reported to
have been an excellent physician before being called to the pulpit in 1840.
After service at Lexington and Louisville Fourth Street (the two strongest
churches in the state at this time), among other charges, Miller was sent to
Paris and Millersburg in 1852. There, to augment his income and better care
for his family, he began the Millersburg Male and Female Academy, a Methodist
school. At the end of his two year appointment, he was moved, but the
institution continued and evolved into both Kentucky Wesleyan College and the
Millersburg College for Women.
Bishop Short notes in his history that a northern church
had been organized in Lexington by 1848, but gives no more information. It is
unlikely that the northern Methodist Church would have ignored a city as
important as Lexington, and would have tried to organize a church here. The
name of that church has been lost as it apparently did not last long. The 1849
state elections produced a strong victory for pro-slavery forces, and the
general attitude would not have favored a northern church.
One Methodist preacher who may have been associated with
this northern Methodist church was Calvin Fairbank, one of the most famous of
the local leaders of the "Underground Railroad."
In 1843, Fairbank outbid a New Orleans man for a slave
woman being auctioned at the market on Cheapside, next to the courthouse. He
set her free immediately after the sale. In 1844, Fairbank and some others
took an enslaved waiter at the Phoenix Hotel, together with his wife and son,
to Maysville and ferried them across the river to freedom. On the way back to
Lexington, Fairbank and his accomplices were arrested at Paris and jailed at
Megowan's Jail on South Upper Street.
Sentenced to fifteen years in the state penitentiary,
Fairbank was pardoned in 1848, only to be arrested again in 1851 for helping
slaves escape. This time, he served eleven years of a like term, being
released only after the Federal forces occupied Kentucky in 1862.
Rev. Fairbank obviously lived in the Lexington area, if not
in the city, and it may be that he was pastor of the northern church. However,
his overt activities and imprisonments would have made it very difficult for
any northern church to continue in the face of growing pro-Southern public
opinion.
The year 1850 saw the election of Bascom as bishop and the
appointment of Lorenzo D. Huston to Lexington. Transferring to the Kentucky
Conference in 1843 from Ohio, Huston was a man of literary abilities. After
serving Hill Street, and Southern churches in Covington and Cincinnati, he
became editor of two Methodist publications in 1854 and moved to Nashville.
There he remained until U. S. Army troops invaded Nashville during the Civil
War and took possession of the Southern Methodist Publishing House. Huston
then became chaplain of the 18th Kentucky Volunteer Infantry in the
Confederate army. After the war, he returned to the Kentucky Conference.
The owners of a three story building at the southwest
corner of Main and Upper remodeled it extensively in 1850. An ornamental,
cast-iron facade was added, and the top two stories were converted into a
concert gallery called Melodeon Hall, with auditorium seating for up to four
hundred people in front on the stage and in the balcony. Operas, concerts, and
shows, including an appearance by the famous Gen. Tom Thumb, were held here
for about thirty years. This building is now known as the McAdams and Morford
building and its facade is one of the more famous elements of historic
downtown Lexington.
William C. Danley (Lewis erroneously spells his surname
"Dandy"), admitted to preach in 1842, came to Hill Street in 1852.
Arnold reports that little information is available about him, other than that
he was retiring, little given to speaking from the floor during Conference,
and having an effeminate voice. Although a minister of the Church, South,
Danley was strongly pro-Union during the Civil War. When the war ended,
several pro-Union leaders of Southern Kentucky Conference were rejected as
delegates to the 1866 General Conference, South. Danley and others, who became
known in Methodist history as the "Loyal Eighteen," left to join the
northern Kentucky Conference.
Rev. Samuel Adams, perhaps named for the Revolutionary
patriot from Boston, was named to Lexington in 1854, and quickly caused a
revolution of his own at Hill Street.
During the ministry of Adams, a disagreement arose between
Adams and the Hill Street church officers over the authority of those
officers. Adams, long-time church trustee Nicholas Headington, and fifty-seven
other members of the congregation left Hill Street to start their own
Methodist church. A fire that year destroyed Transylvania's old Medical Hall,
which it shared with the Lexington Library, at the corner of Market and Church
Streets. Adams' group purchased the damage structure for $300 and repaired it,
using it as their chapel. The Kentucky Statesman, a Lexington
newspaper, reported on January 16, 1857, that the new Methodist Church,
located opposite the Episcopal Church, would be dedicated on Sunday the 18th.
Unfortunately, the newspaper did not report on the dedication itself, and it
is not known whether the Bishop was present or represented (thus showing
Church approval of the local division), or whether Adams performed the service
himself.
This new congregation took the name "Second Methodist
Episcopal Church, South." Had this church survived, it could have led to
an earlier renaming of Hill Street Church; but it was not to be. Adams must
have had an adamant view of who should have authority in a local church. The Lexington
Morning Transcript-Herald reports that a "disagreement between the
congregation and the officers of the new church resulted in the resignation of
Mr. Adams and the calling of C. B. Parsons, who failed to give satisfaction,
and at last, after existing independently for eight or nine years, most of the
members returned to the old church, and deeded their property to the Church
South"
Adams named his church building " Morris Chapel,"
after Bishop Thomas A. Morris. Born in 1794, Morris was licensed to preach in
the Ohio Conference in 1816, and came to Kentucky in 1821, where he served
several charges until 1828, when he returned to Ohio. In 1834, Morris became
editor of The Western Christian Advocate, and in 1836 was elected
bishop. Neither Arnold nor Short give any hint why Adams would have named the
new building after Bishop Morris. It can only be concluded that Adams had
conceived a great affection for Morris, who may well have guided Adams early
in the latter's ministry.
If Charles Booth Parsons gave "no satisfaction" to
the Morris Chapel congregation, it must have been in the area of local church
policy and authority. It certainly could not have been in the pulpit.
Parsons had chosen to be an actor early in life and earned
a great reputation as a Shakespearean player. He was converted by the infamous
John Newland Maffitt in Louisville and felt called to preach. So great were
his talents as a preacher that his presiding elder gave special permission for
Parsons to begin before the end of his six month probationary period. His
early ministry was interrupted by a prior commitment on stage before he could
devote his full time to the church. Redford described Parsons in this way:
"In him were combined all the requisites of the true orator - great
emotion, passion, a correct judgment of human nature, genius, fancy,
imagination, gesture, attitude, intonation, and countenance, with a commanding
presence, all united in blended strength to accomplish the mighty purpose
which moved his heart." Parsons left the disappointed dissident
Methodists for other charges. Eventually he would align with the northern
church in the year before his death in 1866.
Arnold notes that Parsons served churches in Frankfort, St.
Louis (two churches), Cincinnati and Louisville (four), and a year as
presiding elder of the Louisville District. Arnold does not mention Lexington
in the list, although it is unlikely that there were two Methodist preachers
named C. B. Parsons at this time in Kentucky.
The exact year Morris Chapel reunited with Hill Street is
not known, but it occurred during or toward the end of the Civil War. The
reunion was not occasioned by any failure of Morris Chapel to thrive; they had
grown by a factor of four, to over two hundred members, when they returned.
Nor does it appear that the Church, South made any particular policy changes
regarding local authority in this period, so the cause of the dispute is
supposed to have still existed.
Wright reports that anti-slavery unionists dominated Hill
Street during the Civil War. It may be that the group which left under Adams
was a pro-slavery faction of the congregation. Their return, after the
question had been mooted by the War, or at least after Federal occupation of
Lexington, together with their allegiance to the Southern Methodist Church,
supports the idea.
Admittedly, it is at variance with the statement that this
schism was over the power and authority of church officers; but when dealing
with a topic as sensitive as slavery, a gloss was often applied in
contemporary accounts. If there were truly a dispute over authority, it is
unlikely that this group would have continued its alignment with the Church,
South.
T. P. C. Shelman was appointed to Hill Street Church in
1855, in the wake of Adams' departure, and served for two years before being
replaced by John H. Lirin. During Lirin's ministry, the church reported a
membership of 219 white and 570 black churchgoers. Kentucky as a whole for the
same year, 1858, was about twenty-eight percent black. The reasons for the
high black membership at Hill Street is not known. As a Southern Methodist
church, it may be presumed that slaveholders were members, and consequently,
many of the black members may have belonged to white members. At the same
time, Methodism never excluded free blacks and nationally, over the years, had
assisted in the establishment of black congregations. The popular perception
of a family owning great numbers of slaves is just that, and when true, only
applicable to large farm operations. Families living in towns rarely owned
more than one or two slaves, and even the wealthy in Lexington (few of whom
were Methodists) did not keep many more. However, if it is correct that Hill
Street's members were predominantly anti-slavery, the high number of black
members is easily understood and a fair proportion of them would have been
freedmen, probably independent tradesmen.
Edmund P. Buckner, described by Arnold as perhaps the
strongest member of the class of new preachers admitted in 1843, was appointed
to Hill Street at the age of thirty-seven. It would appear that Buckner was
very intelligent, with a highly trained mind. He is described as a voracious
reader, a laborious and accurate student, and as having amassed". . .a
large store of literary, scientific and theological wealth" Buckner also
studied medicine, a healthy side-line for a minister.
Unfortunately, Lexington benefited from Buckner's presence
only one year, as he was replaced by Robert Hiner in 1860. Twelve years in the
ministry when he arrived, Hiner was reportedly a strong preacher, "a
particularly strong pulpit man" He guided Hill Street through the first
two years of the Civil War.
In one of those touches of irony frequent in history, the
hometown of Abraham Lincoln's wife saw the performance at Melodeon Hall of
what Wright described as ". . .a memorable rendition of Shakespeare's Richard
111, staring a promising, darkly handsome young actor by the name of John
Wilkes Booth" during the winter of 1861 - 1862.
William C. Danley returned to Hill Street's pulpit in 1862,
and served two years, followed by W. T. Spruill in 1864. These two men led
Hill Street Church during the majority of the Civil War. Little is known of
them, but something is known of the church while they were there.
In 1894, Rev. H. P. Walker, then at Hill Street, wrote a
short historical sketch for the (Lexington) Church Record, published in
1897. He reports that the church ". . .had a great struggle for
existence. Two sets of people were within her pale, the Northern and Southern,
and their opposite sympathies and prejudices kept the church in a state of
turmoil and confusion. The Unionists, however, held sway over the church in
such a way as to cause many Southern sympathizers to go into the fellowship of
other churches. Quite a number, from time to time, made their way into the
Presbyterian and Episcopal churches, in order to avoid discord and enjoy a
season of peace. A church convulsed by the violent prejudices and passion,
springing up on both sides during a desperate civil strife like ours, could
not possibly, experience much numerical increase ."
Walker confirms (if he was not the source of) Wright's
observation of northern dominance in the church. Interestingly, although he
mentions other denominations as the recipients of member transfers, he does
not mention Adams' schism. His final emphasis on numerical increase is the
result of years of required reports as a Methodist minister, both quarterly
and annually, on the numbers of members in his churches.
By 1865, the War was over, but Lexington was still
"occupied" by northern troops. The Lexington Observer reported
on September 16th, that mounted military police were patrolling the streets,
although all federal troops around the town had been moved back a distance of
four miles into the country. Six companies of the 185th Ohio Infantry
Volunteers were encamped and six more companies were en route.
The newspaper column next to the report of the annual
conference contained newly promulgated General Orders from U. S. Brigadier
General James S. Brisbin, the new commander of the 1st Division (Military)
Department of Kentucky. These orders announced Gen. Brisbin's assumption of
command and further ordered that the "dangerous and unnecessary practice
of allowing enlisted men to carry pistols and concealed weapons must at once
be discontinued;" and that "officers and soldiers are reminded that
we are now no longer at war, and the license granted in time of war will not
be permitted."
Repercussions were still being felt as the country worked
to reorganize after the conflict. The social, and religious, reorganization
included the public realignment of many people who had either secretly sided
with the North or felt that unity was now more important.
The Kentucky Conference, South, met in Covington in
September, voting thirty-seven to twenty-three not to seek any union with the
Northern church. At this conference, a group of ministers who came to be known
as the "Loyal Eighteen" left the Southern connection to rejoin the
Northern Methodist Church. This group included the pastor at Hill Street. In
December, following the example and lead of the pastor, 133 members of Hill
Street left to start Lexington's first permanent northern Methodist
congregation, to become known as Centenary Methodist Episcopal Church.
It is reasonable to ask why, if Hill Street Methodist
Church had been primarily anti-slavery, there was even a need for a group to
leave and form Centenary as a member of the Methodist Church. Why didn't the
congregation simply switch conferences?
The answer may lie in the distinction between anti-slavery
and pro-Southern feelings, coupled with a sense of loyalty to the Southern
Conference. Wright notes that the sympathies of Lexington's citizens were
generally pro-Union during the war (a reasonable stand in view of the northern
armies encamped in and around town), but that they switched after the war
ended. He illustrates his point with the fact that the only two statues on the
courthouse lawn honor men Breckinridge and Morgan - who fought in the
Confederate Army.
When the issue was raised before the congregation, there
can be no doubt that the members heatedly debated their feelings and
loyalties, the minister and others arguing for reunion with what they would
have characterized as the original and "true" national church. Other
leaders would have responded, as in fact the courts had ruled in suits over
control of church property, that the division years before had been the agreed
creation of two churches, each equally the successor to the original body.
There was another reason why a Southern Methodist would oppose reunion.
During the war, northern Methodist bishops sent
"missionaries" south with the Union Armies to "retake," in
an almost military sense, the pulpits of Methodist churches. Some Southern
Methodist preachers were actually evicted from their churches by force by the
northern preachers with the aid of the military.
The arrangements had been made through Secretary of War
Stanton, whose mother was Methodist. Stanton ordered all Union generals
commanding conquered areas to place at the disposal of Bishop Edward Raymond
Ames of the northern Methodist church "all houses of worship belonging to
the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, in which a loyal minister, who has been
appointed by a loyal Bishop of said Church does not officiate." If that
were not enough, he also ordered the army to provide supplies and
transportation.
When the protests of Southern Methodists finally made it
through the lines and reached President Lincoln, he promptly directed Stanton
to change his orders. Even so, the damage had been done and relations between
the two branches of Methodism were at their lowest ebb. And as Ferguson notes,
the "invasion was all the more painful because it was a peculiarly
Methodist phenomenon." Despite Bishop Ames' appeals, no other
denomination joined him.
Although no Kentucky churches were thus reclaimed, Hill
Street was of the Church, South and Lexingtonians were in frequent
communication with friends in the Confederacy. The memory of this action
coupled with public criticisms of the Southern churches would have affected
the debate. Unable to reach a compromise, the Hill Street congregation split.
The Kentucky statutes on church schisms directed that, when
a congregation divided, for whatever reason, each group had the right to
reasonable use and occupancy of church property. This was not a violation of
the separation of church and state, for the laws made no distinctions
regarding faith or doctrine. Rather, they acted to secure that over which the
state has a right legislate: the property rights of its citizens.
Hill Street still owned Morris Chapel, as well as the main
church property. It appears that the property issues were resolved and the
statutes complied with by the departing members moving to Morris Chapel. This
also leads to the conclusion that, while sizable, the northern group comprised
a minority of the total membership as the chapel was the smaller of the two
properties.
After meeting for a short time in Morris Chapel, they
bought a lot at the
corner of Broadway and Church streets and erected their own
church. They named it, as appears to have been the custom, Broadway Methodist
Episcopal Church. The name change to Centenary would come in later years. It
may be presumed that many of the black members also left to join other black
congregations.
This left Hill Street in weakened condition. The Conference
appointed Joseph Rand to the church, and together with Presiding Elder H. P.
Walker, he set about rebuilding the congregation. In an historical article in
1915, the Lexington Herald reported that Walker "moved at once to
consolidate the remaining members of the church, and by his industry and
untiring efforts succeeded in paying off a debt that was then resting against
the church for repairs, leaving a small balance also in the treasury." A
part of this debt reduction effort included the sale of the Morris Chapel lot
and building in 1866. It had been used for overflow meetings and was not now
needed after the departure of the northern members. It may also be surmised
that a portion of the sale proceeds may have been paid to the Centenary
congregation in satisfaction of their legal rights to church property.
The Lexington Library Association purchased the chapel
property and converted to their use. The library remained there until the
generous gift of Andrew Carnegie and the assistance of Transylvania University
enabled the construction of a new library in Gratz Park.
With the establishment of Centenary, Hill Street now began
to be referred to occasionally as the First Methodist Church, South. The last
involuntary division of the church had occurred. The long period of struggle,
of coping with the problems of growth, schism and civil strife was over and
the financial reports were positive.
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CHAPTER
SEVEN
[history
table of contents]
GROWTH AND
EXPANSION
As much as the Civil War in Kentucky was brother against
brother, the years following the war saw a battle between the Northern and
Southern Methodist churches which Bishop Short in his history of Kentucky
Methodism characterizes as "altar against altar" The northern church
came back into Kentucky and former Confederate states with a zeal to reclaim
members. While Short notes the battle was particularly strong in Eastern
Kentucky, he does not comment on whether Lexington's two Methodist churches
joined the fray.
In all likelihood, they did. Then as now, many of
Lexington's residents came from Eastern Kentucky, and would have brought their
feelings about one church or the other with them. Hill Street and Centenary,
both strong but both desirous of increasing their congregations, would have
competed for new members. If any conflict existed between the two churches,
however, it was not so great as to leave any mark in the newspapers of the
time and both grew during this period.
In 1866, Brinkley M. Messick, a Lexington native, was
appointed to the Hill Street pulpit. After attending Centre College, Messick
transferred to Transylvania where he was class valedictorian. In 1858, he
joined the Southern Conference, preaching in several central Kentucky churches
before his appointment to his hometown. Later moved to the Louisville
Conference, Messick was a national church leader and once came within a few
votes of election as a bishop. He was also an early and strong supporter of
the Methodist Home.
The following year, Messick and the church served as hosts
to the Annual Conference. The newspaper reported that "for the first time
in Kentucky there will be lay members of the Conference. We trust that the
Rev. B. M. Messick, under whose ministry the church here has prospered
exceedingly, will be returned to this charge."
He was not, however, and in his place was sent Robert
Kennon Hargrove, a transfer from the Tennessee Conference who would be elected
bishop in 1882. During Hargrove's pastorate, the first public school for black
children in Lexington, sponsored by the Freedman's Bureau, was opened in Hill
Street's former building on Church Street.
S. X. Hall followed him, serving Hill Street from 1868 to
1870. The Lexington Observer reported in July, 1869: "The
residents on Mill Street, in the vicinity of the new gas lamps, are rejoicing
over the fact that they can now go to church at night without breaking their
necks in the darkness. A number of citizens on Broadway have petitioned the
(City) Council to enable them to rejoice in a like manner. They claim that gas
posts on their street are like angel's visits, decidedly few and far between,
but that they are taxed enough to have a few more."
The newspaper didn't say which part of Mill Street had been
illuminated, the short blocks north of Main Street to Transylvania, or south
across Town Branch and up the hill past Hill Street and into which is now
called South Hill. The church referred to in the article could have been
either Hill Street Methodist, or any of the churches located on or near Church
Street. Whichever congregation it was which benefited, the reminder is that
Methodists and other congregations frequently attended night services by
traveling in a darkness relieved only by whatever moon there might be and the
light from an occasional house window. As few houses boasted gas, the light
from candles near windows would not have helped much.
Gaslights were not the only changes in Lexington. The Lexington
Daily Press began in 1870 as the city's first daily paper. It would later
merge with the Transcript in 1895, and be renamed successively the Morning
Herald and the Lexington Herald. Old Back Street, site of the
Lexington Society's log cabin, had been extended to Third Street, and renamed
Deweese in 1867. The population had grown, too; but the black populace had
increased since 1860 at a rate six times that of the white. The two races were
now almost equal in numbers, and in the post war period race relations were a
problem for both groups.
H. A. M. Henderson was appointed to Hill Street in 1870 for
a year, followed by Joseph Rand who served until 1873. During the last part of
Rand's ministry, the summer of 1873, the church was substantially remodeled
although the nature of the work is not known. The newspaper on July 18th,
carried the announcement that: "On account of the improvements now
progressing on the Methodist Church, South, on High Street, there will be no
preaching there until further notice."
No doubt the preaching did continue elsewhere, but the work
must have been extensive to warrant a complete cessation of services. The
newspaper, in January of the next year, would comment in passing that anyone
"who has not seen the Hill Street Methodist Church since it has been
repaired will be surprised at the changes...." Interestingly, the
name of Hill/ High Street must have been changing about this time, as these
two articles exchange the names. The church, apparently, was still referred to
by the old name.
The expense of remodeling the church was probably harder to
bear for the members than they originally anticipated when they approved the
project. Interest rates had climbed over the preceding three years to ten
percent, very high for the period, and Lexington was in a mild economic
depression.
In that same year, the city passed an ordinance prohibiting
prostitutes from riding in open carriages, which must have afforded some small
comfort to visiting preachers as, on September 3, 1873, the Annual Conference
again met at Hill Street. The press reported that "the newly fitted-up
church on Hill Street furnished a very pleasant and comfortable place of
meeting" for the seventy-five to one hundred delegates. Lexington's lay
delegation (being Hill Street members) was comprised of J. M. Tipton, J. W.
O'Rear, R. B. George and E. W. Hardy. One of the first reports made to the
Conference was on the state of the Church, South, described as prosperous and
growing, with a new church having been built for each day of the year. The
Church, South, had over 600,000 members. The Conference met for six days and
considered several important matters. Among these was a resolution that
"the character of any preacher who reported his own salary received in
full, and other claims behind hand" not be approved. The resolution lost;
but it reveals that the churches of the Conference were having occasional
financial problems, and that the preachers were frequently faced with the
choice of taking their pay in order to live or allocating the limited funds to
other church debts. Resolutions directing annual inspections of church
registers and quarterly conference records were passed, as well as one adding
a layman from each district to a committee on changing the Conference boundary
lines.
This Conference was also notable for the semi-centennial
sermon of Bishop H. H. Kavanaugh (twice a pastor at Hill Street),
commemorating his fifty years in the Kentucky Conference.
The Conference elected its ministerial, reserve and lay
delegates to the coming General Conference, including Hill Street member J. M.
Tipton in the latter category, and R. H. Read was appointed to Hill Street.
(Lewis uses this spelling of his name, although a contemporary reference in
the newspaper spells it "Reid.")
On March 4, 1874, the Lexington Daily Press reported
that a revival had been in progress at Hill Street for several days and was
continuing without any abatement of interest. One hundred and six new members
had united with the church during the revival. "This is said to be the
largest increase ever known in the same length of time in this church,"
according to the article, "and it is of special comfort to the older
members that the new additions are largely heads of families, grown young men
and young women." This is one of several references in the historical
record to the welcome addition of new, young members to Hill Street and seems
to indicate that the church experienced periodic "graying" of its
membership.
In 1876, the same year the Red Mile race track opened, H.
Pierce Walker, a Fleming County native who had joined the Conference in 1856,
was appointed to Hill Street. In 1865, just after the end of the War, he was
one of thirteen members of a Conference committee on the State of the Church.
The committee majority approved the recommendation that the Kentucky
Conference reunite with the (northern) Methodist Episcopal Church. Walker
presented the minority committee view to the contrary, and his report was
adopted by the Conference on a vote of thirty-five to twenty-four.
While at Hill Street, Walker conducted an eight week
revival which gained over 160 new members. Lewis reports in her 1939 history
of the church that, at that time, there were still members in the congregation
who remembered and spoke with enthusiasm of this revival.
Walker was obviously a great preacher and worker who lost
no time in performing his duties. In May, 1878, the General Conference
authorized creation of the Women's Foreign Missionary Society, which the
Kentucky Annual Conference in September adopted. In October, newly home from
Conference, Walker organized the Hill Street Auxiliary of the Society,
beginning with sixty-three women and thirteen men as members. The following
year, the first Annual Session of the Kentucky Conference Society was held at
Hill Street.
Bishop Short tells us that in this era the prevailing limit
on service at one church was four years, and Rev. Walker reached that limit in
1880. The newspaper reported on September ll th that "by the request of
many friends," (no doubt from the desire to hear favorite sermons once
more), Rev. Walker "has consented to preach his sermon on 'The Ark'
Sunday at 11, and his sermon on 'The Flood' Sunday night at 7 ½
o'clock." The Annual Conference began at Hill Street on the fifteenth,
and Walker was appointed presiding elder. "No better promotion could have
been made," the press noted. "Mr. Walker has proven a faithful and
efficient pastor and will carry both wisdom and fidelity to the discharge of
his new duties."
The earlier recession was followed by a boom period in
Lexington. By 1880, Lexington was served by four railroads extending north,
west and south; and a fifth, to Eastern Kentucky, would follow in a few years.
The first telephone company was established, having offices on the third floor
of a building on Cheapside. Its equipment was primitive, however, and a
tangled mass of individual wires streamed from its third floor window down to
the poles on Main Street.
Lexington had also outbid Bowling Green as the site for the
state's new Agricultural & Mechanical College, which would grow into the
University of Kentucky. The city gave $50,000 in bonds and its city park,
formerly the fairgrounds, as a campus. In 1881, the first college football
game in the region was played in Lexington. Kentucky University, as
Transylvania was then known, beat Centre College by the improbable score of 13
3/4 to zero.
C. W. Miller followed Walker in the Hill Street pulpit and
was no less well thought of by his contemporaries. In 1881, Miller, while at
Hill Street, was appointed by the Conference as a delegate to the Ecumenical
Council of the Methodist Church, South, to be held that August in London,
England. As a further honor, he would be one of five delegates to speak before
the Council. Before he left for this journey, however, Miller continued well
the work begun by Walker; for example, the Foreign Missions Society reported
on June 26, 1881, that it had collected $235 that Sunday. To give some idea of
that sum, membership dues to the Conference Society are reported by Bishop
Short to have been ten cents per month in 1880.
F. W. Noland (or Nolan) was appointed to Hill Street in
1882, for four years. Lewis reports that the church grew steadily in numbers
during his pastorate.
The year 1882 began with a strong religious call for
Lexingtonians, one which some preachers felt was not answered adequately. The
preachers of several local churches met to plan Union Services for the first
week of the year, and individually made special references to "Renewed
Consecration" in their sermons on January second. The Daily Press presented
the schedule of services for the public, to be held each night, as follows:
Monday: "Thanksgiving" First Baptist Church
Tuesday: "Humiliation and Confession" Second
Presbyterian
Wednesday: "Blessing of God" Broadway
Methodist Church (i.e., Centenary)
Thursday: "Young" Hill Street Methodist Church,
South
Friday: "Universal Peace" Upper Street Baptist
Church
Saturday: "Church Missions" First Presbyterian.
The paper reported that the Union Meetings were in
accordance with the design of the Evangelical Alliance for the Week of Prayer
in 1882, and it appears that this alliance had been at least a Lexington
practice for several years. Rev. George Wilson of Second Presbyterian,
preaching at First Baptist, set the tone for the meetings, as reported by the Daily
Transcript:
"He was glad that Christianity could forget sects and
get down to where it was in the first century, to the missionary effort, which
from a small beginning had filed the whole world; that for one week the
different bodies of Christians could meet on common ground. Here was a reason
for thankfulness." Viewing the pews before him, however, Rev. Wilson also
regretted that, while the surrounding areas were well represented that night,
Lexington was not.
The meetings continued during the week but bad weather kept
attendance low. The preacher at the third meeting was reported to have said
that "the Christians in Lexington are an unpraying people." Whether
that was a comment on low turnout for the meetings or the state of religious
feeling in the city, the paper did not report.
The newspaper's report on the fourth session, held at Hill
Street on the topic of the "Young," is interesting. First, the
reporter notes that although "the walking was very bad, the streets being
very sloppy, yet a good audience attended,' including, appropriately, more
young people than at the previous sessions. Then, commenting on the evening's
address, the reporter said:
"(The) greatest question, perhaps that troubled the
minister, was how to reach, what to do with, the brilliant young man the open,
frank, honest, manly boy - the toast of the club, the pet of society? Then the
question presents itself, where is there any place in the Church for the
Christian young man? He either becomes a teacher in the Sabbath school, an
usher in church, or does nothing, . . ."
The article goes on in this same vein for more than half of
its length, straying in an almost personal way from mere reporting of events.
Even with due consideration for the form of the article and the general
newspaper style of the day, it must be wondered whether the now unknown
reporter so plaintively presenting these questions didn't see himself as one
of those "manly boys," the toast of his club, but unable to find a
comfortable place in his church.
That article, as well as all the reports, was not
attributed; so it is not known whether the final report on Union Week in any
way reflects whether the "manly boy" found his answer. The 7hanscript
concluded its series of reports thus: "The series of union meetings
last week, in the different churches, was one of the most remarkable held in
the city for many years. . . In the spirit of union and brotherhood which
prevailed; the pertinency and excellence of the addresses; the fullness and
power of the prayers, the city has had no such meetings since the winter of
1875."
In addition to his work in these annual Union Meetings,
Rev. Nolan led Hill Street in the last of the major renovations to its 1840
building. Once again, extensive work was done, and among the new was the
purchase of new pulpit chairs of turned wood with cushioned seats and backs.
These were used until the new building was erected in 1907. Current members of
the church will immediately recognize these chairs as being two of the four
present chairs on the platform. For the 19671968 renovation to the sanctuary,
a third chair, matching but slightly taller, was copied and donated by a
church member. Later another church member made and donated the fourth chair,
matching the third in height.
Additional work included the purchase and installation of a
new pulpit and altar rail, conversion of the old balcony (built during the
Civil War, according to Lewis, for black members, since decreased in number)
into a Sunday School room, and installation of a new furnace to replace the
old series of drum shaped stoves which heated the church. However, as Lewis
reports, the arrival of the furnace was delayed. The church women had
undertaken the task of raising the funds to purchase the furnace through
church sociables, oyster and ice cream suppers, County Fair dinners and court
day dinners down on Cheapside. Twice, however, another pressing need was found
and the money diverted to those uses. Finally, after the third drive by these
hard-working church women, the money was raised to buy and install the
furnace. The first pipe organ for the church would be installed several years
later, in 1892.
The decade of the 1880's saw several developments in
Lexington, some significant in history and some incidental. In 1882, the
Woodland Park Association purchased 110 acres from the heirs of Henry Clay and
developed both the present fifteen acre park and a residential subdivision
with 480 lots. The Lexington Railway Company was chartered the same year and
in seven months laid nine miles of track along Main, Broadway, Limestone,
Third and other streets. It began operation the following year with wooden
cars and thirty miles. By the end of the decade, the first electric street car
was operating out of a "car barn" on Louden Avenue. The street cars
and residential expansion created an increase in land values as more people
could live in the new "suburbs" and commute to town. This would
later create a problem for Hill Street Methodist church.
City sponsored improvements were not lacking, either, as
the council approved purchase of a giant steam roller to be used to level the
many brick, wooden block and macadam streets. In 1884, the fourth courthouse
was erected, and the city policemen discarded their old "uniform" of
a hat with a black band proclaiming their job for a true uniform. In 1883, the
federal government began free city mail delivery.
Finally, in 1889, Transylvania University began admitting
women students, two years after the new Opera House opened on Broadway.
Although coincidental, the two events no doubt combined to provide increased
patronage for the Opera House and increased concern for University officials.
John R. Deering was appointed to Hill Street in 1886,
following the end of Nolan's four years. The newspaper for September 5th,
reported that Rev. Nolan was to preach his farewell sermon that day, and noted
that he "has done more for Hill Street church" than any other
pastor. The press, not given to speaking ill of ministers, frequently bestowed
these accolades on departing pastors, but Nolan deserved the praise. Lexington
at the time of Deering's departure boasted a population of 26,000, and its
real property was assessed for tax purposes at a total of $7.6 million.
Union Services were held again in 1887, and this time it
was remodeling at Second Presbyterian which caused a relocation of services
from that church to Hill Street, the Presbyterians having removed their old
pews but not yet installed the new. On December 27, 1889, the Lexington
Press reported on a Christmas celebration for the children in Hill
Street's Sunday School. The event featured a poem by Longfellow, missionary
offerings by the students, hymns, an appearance by Santa Claus, and the award
by Rev. Deering of two prizes to the children answering the greatest number of
Bible questions during the year. Lewis also reports that Deering conducted a
great revival during his pastorate.
The Annual Conference returned again to Hill Street in
1890, with former Hill Street pastor Bishop Hargrove presiding. E. L.
Southgate was appointed to the church, replacing Deering, and H. P. Walker,
another former pastor, was named presiding elder. According to the Lexington
Press, the "weather, always on the lookout for conventions and the
like, was promptly on hand" for the first session of the Conference
"with a steady downpour, not a storm, nor a gentle shower, but a rain
that meant business" to greet the arriving ministers.
The evening sermon on September 11th was delivered by Dr.
Morrison of Frankfort. He took the story of Jonah as his text, and delivered
himself of "a torrent of plain English and unvarnished common
sense." In the process, he "hurled at Lexington the damnation for
drink and gambling and horse racing that Jonah hurled at Nineveh for her
sins." This was not the first time nor the last, as will be seen in the
next chapter, that Lexington's social pursuits were at variance with the
opinions of visiting preachers.
The full name of the new preacher at Hill Street was Edward
Lush Southgate, Jr. He intensely disliked his middle name, as might be
expected of a minister whose church was so vehemently opposed to drinking,
even though it was a family name. The fourth son of a Methodist minister and a
first cousin of Bishop H. H. Kavanaugh, Southgate had been a minister for
twenty-four years when he came to Lexington; but before he armed himself with
a bible, he had been armed with a gun.
Intending on a legal career, Southgate was enrolled at
Miami of Ohio when the Civil War began. A Northern Kentucky native, he
enlisted in a Boone County Confederate regiment on July 22, 1862. Just one
week later he was captured by Union forces at Mt. Sterling and spent the next
six months in prison, until he was exchanged with other prisoners of war at
Vicksburg. He promptly, and against the usual conditions of exchange, enlisted
in the Kentucky Mounted Rifles (CSA), trading foot soldiering for horse and a
better chance to escape recapture.
Whether he completed the war in the saddle in not known;
but on New Year's Eve, 1865, he was converted. A year later he felt the call
to the ministry and was licensed to preach in Newport in April, 1866. The same
month, he was also admitted to the Kentucky Bar, although he never practiced
law. His father was also a preacher/lawyer, but his grandfather appears to
have been just a lawyer.
At the Kentucky Conference of 1867 he was the youngest
preacher present, and was assigned to room with the oldest, "Father
Collard." Interestingly, Rev. Collard had received Southgate's father
into the church forty years earlier and had, as a young preacher, administered
communion to Southgate's great-grandfather at that gentleman's deathbed.
"The Rev. E. L. Southgate was pastor of First
Church," the Lexington Herald noted in an article twenty-five
years later, "when because of the wondrous revival held under his
administration and the subsequent condition of prosperity, the idea was
conceived by the Rev. Walker, who was presiding elder of the district, to
found a new church in Lexington"
The Conference Journals show appointments and
appropriations for 1890 and 1891 to a mission of the Hill Street Church. This
was an effort, led by Southgate, to reach the many families, including some
from Hill Street church, who were moving to the newly developed sections of
the north end of Lexington. A Sunday School was organized, which met for a
time in a private home. Attempts were made to start a church, but the
committee in charge could not generate enough interest. Then, the Herald reported,
"During one year that was filled with revival meetings about 125 persons
were added to the First M. E. Church by the Rev. Southgate and $3,000 had been
raised by subscriptions to pay off a debt on the church. With this new era of
prosperity,. . ." the momentum was there to proceed.
A meeting was held at the church on a Sunday afternoon in
August, 1894, and those present voted to ask the Conference to create Epworth
charge. The Conference affirmed the request the following month and Rev.
Southgate, for over four years a leader in the movement, was made Epworth's
first pastor. About a hundred members of Hill Street transferred to the new
church. It is also worthy of note that Southgate was so devoted to the
establishment of a new church that he donated the land for the building. It is
also significant that, for the first time, a new church was created involving
some of Hill Street members through orderly expansion and not schism.
W. T. Bolling was appointed to succeed Southgate for two
years, followed by C. F. Evans in 1896, the year of the first motion pictures
in Lexington. These films were shown as short subjects between vaudeville acts
at the Opera House. Evans, a native of Louisiana, was converted to Methodism
in New Orleans in 1853. After the Civil War, he became a minister, serving in
Mississippi, New Orleans, Arkansas and Tennessee before coming to Kentucky.
During his pastorate, the Hill Street congregation was very active, supporting
a Junior League, Epworth League, Ladies Aid Society, and both the Women's
Foreign Mission and Home Missionary Societies.
Two years later the Lexington Brewery Company erected its
new brewery on Main Street, opposite Deweese. It was the largest structure on
Main Street and would stand for forty-three years. J. S. Simms was appointed
to Hill Street. Lewis reports that " splendid spiritual advance was
made" under these men, "but no interest could be roused in the need
for a new church building." The existing church structure had been
erected in 1840, and remodeled at least twice, the latest almost twenty years
before.
On Sunday morning, March 6, 1898, a unique and unusual
event occurred on the steps of Hill Street Methodist Church: a fight broke out
between two members!
It seems, according to the front page report in the Morning
Herald, that objections had continued for six years to a certain member of the
congregation singing in the choir because his "voice was not suited to
choir singing" He, however, stoutly maintained that it was the right of
every church member to sing in the choir if he wished. The issue was the
subject of discussion in several church board meetings over the years.
Ultimately, a two man committee was appointed by the church board to inform
the objectionable chorister that it was preferred he remain with the
congregation. The man's voice must have been truly remarkable to be the
subject of official board action. One can't help wondering whether the object
of the action was to restore harmony to the choir or the board meetings.
After the service that morning, while the errant singer was
standing on the church steps, the committee approached him to do their duty.
On being informed, the member emphasized his restatement of his rights with a
rhetorical shake of his fist. One member of the committee misconstrued the
gesture and, fearing an attack on his person, promptly administered several
blows with his cane to the other man. Other members of the congregation rushed
to separate the men, and any further incident was avoided. The Herald reported
that all concerned regretted the event; it does not report whether this eager
singer was permitted back into the choir.
Doubtless, the choir's problems were resolved by the time a
man with an unusual name for a Southern Methodist minister, Ulysses Grant
Foote, was appointed to Hill Street in 1902. His arrival was preceded,
however, by a rare gap in the pulpit. The Morning Herald reported on
September 10th, from Louisville, that "it is understood here that the
Rev. Dr. U. G. Foote, pastor of the largest Methodist Church (South) in
Louisville, will be the next pastor of the Hill Street Methodist Church of
Lexington to succeed Rev. Dr. Sims."
The recently held Kentucky Conference "failed to
appoint a preacher to Lexington, at the suggestion of the presiding
bishop," who desired to transfer Foote to the post from the Louisville
Conference. This created a brief vacancy at Hill Street, because the Kentucky
Conference met in September, and the Louisville Conference would not meet
until October. Dr. J. L. Wever, president of Kentucky Wesleyan College was
sent to occupy Hill Street's pulpit until the new appointment would be made.
The newspaper asked members of the Board of Stewarts of
Hill Street for comment as they left a special meeting of the board. The
members, however, while acknowledging that they had some indication from the
bishop of his intent, did not feel at liberty to make their information public
until after the Louisville Conference had acted on the new appointment. The
82nd Session of the Kentucky Annual Conference concluded in London, Ky., with
the official notation that the Hill Street appointment was "to be
supplied."
Foote was described by the Lexington Herald as an
eloquent speaker, and "a man of large and liberal views." He had
been a member of the Louisville Conference for thirteen years before his
appointment to Lexington, and each of his appointments was to "a bigger
and better field," capped with Louisville Chestnut Street church before
his transfer. Short describes him as an orator of the old school, "an
unusually handsome man, tall, erect in carriage, with an expressive face and a
mass of white hair even when young."
Foote's tenure saw the elevation of the Park Avenue mission
to church status. Park had been a mission of Hill Street for several years,
meeting in a cottage on the south side of High Street when Foote came to
Lexington. Under his pasturage, it prospered and was able to petition to be a
charge, which was granted during the 1907 Conference. In just eleven years,
Hill Street had been the sponsor of two new Methodist churches in Lexington.
As with the founding of Epworth, it lost a number of its members to the new
church; but unlike the schisms of the past, the community of Methodists in
Lexington grew stronger. The new Park congregation, named for its proximity to
Woodland Park, erected their church on the corner of High Street and Clay
Avenue, near the cottage where they had been meeting. Later, under the
pastorate of Dr. R. F. Ockerman, their facilities were increased by
construction of an educational building on the west side of the church.
The Annual Conference was in Lexington again in 1904, and
the press praised the efforts of Foote and the church members in preparing for
the sessions to be held at Hill Street. Notably, "the quartette of the
Hill Street Methodist Church will furnish music" for the Conference. The
ministry of Rev. Foote in Lexington concluded with a report by the board of
Hill Street Church that the year had been the most successful in its history.
An interesting aspect of this Conference was that it
received requests from other city churches for guest ministers during the
Conference. Methodist ministers were sent during the meetings to preach at
Epworth and Centenary Methodist; First, Second and Maxwell Presbyterian;
Chestnut Street and South Side Christian; First Congregational and St. Paul's
A. M. E. churches.
The 1905 Annual Conference included in its agenda the
election of the Conference delegation to the General Conference. Among those
elected were clerical delegate E. G. B. Mann (one of three), clerical
alternate J. R. Deering (one of two), and lay delegate Col. George W. Bain
(one of three), all of Lexington. For the first time in Conference history,
according to the press report, it took two ballots to determine the clerical
delegates and five to elect the lay members. It does not say whether
Lexington's representatives were among the contested spots or easily chosen.
The newspaper also reported that W. J. Morphis was appointed to Hill Street,
just a few months after the first looseleaf burley tobacco sales in the
"Burley Belt" were held in Lexington.
By 1906, when J. R. Savage was appointed to succeed Morphis,
Hill Street owned a church building and parsonage valued at $26,000, against
which there was no debt, and served 692 members. As a consequence of this
large membership, however, the need for a new and larger church was even
greater. Crowding had been a part of Hill Street life dating from the period
of 1894 to 1895, when Rev. Bolling's sermons would draw "a packed house
for nearly every service." Although efforts toward a new building were
made from time to time, nothing resulted.
Then, in 1906, Mrs. Scota Inskeep Chenoweth, daughter and
wife of church officials, died leaving a bequest of $10,000 in her will toward
erecting a new church. She also left a set of requirements: "The church
was to raise $25,000; the new building was to be completed in two years and it
was to be without debt when dedicated."
As Rev. Savage admonished in his report to the December
Quarterly Conference: "This is the opportunity of a lifetime and if we
fail to build under the inspiration of this bequest we may as well abandon the
enterprise altogether. We can and must succeed and if the Official Board will
lead the people they will follow us to victory."
The generous bequest was accepted unanimously, and a
committee was created and empowered, in no small under statement, "to
carry forward of Building a New Church and arranging all details necessary in
carrying out the conditions of Mrs. Chenoweth's will." Lewis states what
happened next:
"Instantly the church was as if under marching
orders. A common purpose unified all forces. Mrs. Chenoweth's will was
probated November, 1906. In March, 1907, the trustees of Hill Street Church
bought from Mrs. Mamie T. Lyle and husband a thirty-seven foot lot joining
the church property on the west, the first pipe organ was sold to Asbury
Methodist Church, the old building was razed and the corner stone of the new
building laid in October, 1907. The new church was dedicated Sunday, January
10, 1909."
The two year deadline was just barely exceeded, but the
bequest was given. Mrs. Chenoweth contemplated that her $10,000, plus the
$25,000 the church would raise to match it, would be enough. It was not. The
new lot cost $4,500; the new building cost $79,000; and a new organ was
another $10,000. To that total of $93,500, was added the cost of completely
new furnishings. However, the last of the conditions was also met. The 1909
Conference Journal reported a church property value of $100,000, without debt.
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CHAPTER
EIGHT
[history
table of contents]
CONFRONTING THE
MODERN ERA
The church might be under marching orders, but it would be
a two year march to completion of the new building. Many details needed to be
addressed, decisions made and goals set and accomplished.
Rev. Savage made the following report to the Quarterly
Conference of the church on February 7, 1907:
"There is considerable interest among our people on
the subject of the new church and there is no doubt now as to the final
success of the movement. It means of course a great deal of hard work but the
people have a mind to work and the prospect is very encouraging. We have been
delayed somewhat on the question of location but hope to settle that very
soon."
The doubt removed was the willingness of the congregation
to raise the $25,000 required by the Chenoweth gift. The building committee
reported to the Conference that about $17,300 had been subscribed already. A
motion carried to borrow the remaining $5,000. Before the new doors opened,
this sum would not be nearly enough; but no one knew it at that meeting.
The question of location was greater. At the same meeting,
the report was made that the "large number of Mission Churches in the
suburbs of the city draw considerably from our pupils" in Sunday School.
Lexington was expanding in all directions and the beginning of what would be a
continual challenge for the church - maintaining a strong church
"downtown" with so many members living "further out" and
nearer other churches - was felt even more than when Park and Epworth
Methodist Churches were started. The establishment by Hill Street of both Park
and Epworth in the "suburbs" and the attendant transfer of some
members to those congregations had been a mixed blessing. The Hill Street
congregation considered whether they, too, should move into one of the newer
neighborhoods. During that year, twenty-five members transferred to Park
Methodist, a number equaling the net loss in membership for the year.
Nevertheless, a commitment was made to stay in the heart of Lexington. The lot
next to the existing church, to the west, was purchased in March.
One final issue remained before plans could be concluded:
some descendants of the members of the former German Lutheran Community
claimed that the Methodists only had a lease for their property, not a deed.
One of the purported conditions of this lease was that the Methodists were to
care for a graveyard at the rear of the property in which over fifty German
Lutherans were buried.
The controversy made the front page of the Lexington
Herald on Sunday, March 24, 1907. The Hill Street board conceded that it
could not produce a deed. As one prominent member was quoted as saying:
"There must be a deed somewhere but we have not been able to locate it.
Our records are not complete and it may be hidden among the old papers of some
former bishop." The Methodists noted that they had a legal claim to the
property based on over seventy years of uninterrupted possession.
The Lutheran descendants appeared more concerned with care
of the graveyard than property rights. One woman told the Herald's reporter:
"From a property standpoint the heirs would get but little in the long
division, but some action will probably be taken either to recover the
property as a pioneer graveyard or arrange to have proper attention shown
it." Not mentioned in the article but clearly a legal problem for the
Lutherans was that their original deed had been to the trustees of the German
Lutheran Community, and not to individuals. Further, just as the Methodists
could not produce a deed, the Lutherans could not produce a lease. The issue
appears to have been resolved by the transfer and reinterment of the graves in
the Lexington Cemetery. A more likely scenario, however, is not that a deed
was missing, but that the German congregation merged into the Methodist
congregation and contributed the property. In 1840, there was no provision for
a public recording of "articles of merger" between religious
associations.
Page one news in the September 8, 1907 Herald was
that the Hill Street Methodist Church, South, had signed the $75,000 contract
the day before. Demolition of the existing structure was scheduled to begin
that week. The article was devoted to a description of the plans for the new
church. After giving the dimensions of the building, the newspaper noted:
"The structure | |