Showing posts with label country churches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label country churches. Show all posts

Saturday, November 02, 2013

Video about the Rose Church

Community of Rose, Nebraska


Here's a short video about the church I attended during most of my growing-up years. I went to Sunday School and Vacation Bible School in the basement, played on the swings in the church yard, and took piano lessons in the parsonage. I know the people who talk about the church in the video. They are the parents of my childhood church friends.

It's so good to see that the Rose community is working together to preserve the little church!

I know that I have a few photos of the Rose Church that I took while visiting up there in 2002, but apparently I've never scanned them. The photo below shows the Rose Cemetery, right across the road from the church. Like the church, it has served the people of Rose for many years, and it continues to play an important role in the community.


Thursday, July 28, 2011

Old Tag Game: Three Deep

Did you play this, as a child?


Here's a game I remember playing at Vacation Bible School when I was growing up. I think we played it at VBS because that was one of the few times when we had enough kids together to make this game really fun!

In this game, the players are arranged in groups of two. All but one of the couples form a big circle facing toward the center, each couple with one player behind the other. There should be good wide spaces between the couples.

One of the two free players is chosen to chase the other. They run around outside the circle. If the one chased is tagged, he becomes the one to do the chasing. At any time, the one who is being pursued may run into the circle and take his place in front of one of the standing couples. This makes that group "three deep" and the third or outside player of the group must immediately leave it to be chased until he either is tagged or causes someone else to be chased by stopping in his turn in front of one of the couples.

If the game is played long enough and with frequent changes, everyone will have a chance to run.

It is not permitted to run across the circle, and the runner may only go into it at the point where he stops in front of a couple. Nor is it permissible for a third man to go directly to the couple immediately to the left or the right of the one he has left. He must run a bit at least. This game makes for alertness and speed in running and is good fun.

Source: Mabie, Hamilton Wright, Edward Everett Hale, and William Byron Forbush. The Young Folks Treasury Vol. X: Ideal Home Life. New York: The University Society, 1919. Print. This excerpt is from p. 159.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Chapel Hill Church in Christian County, KY

Carneal's Chapel, near Barker's Mill, in the West Fork Community


Chapel Hill Church in April, 2009

Tonight, I'm revisiting the Barker's Mill and West Fork area of southeastern Christian County, Kentucky. I want to share some of the photos I took at Chapel Hill Church when I was there several times last spring.

The Chapel Hill Church was originally called Carneal's Chapel for Josiah Carneal who donated land and helped to build it.  Regular worship services are no longer held there, but it was a Methodist church.

The church and cemetery sit inside the bend of a quiet rural road, encircled by farmland. The grounds are shaded by tall oak trees that count their age by the centuries they've seen. Birds sing in the treetops.

The cemetery is nicely maintained. The headstones are a mixture of old and new. I counted about 45 different surnames, but I am sure I missed some of them. A complete listing of the gravestone inscriptions is posted on one of the internet genealogy sites.

In the churchyard, swings and benches invite visitors to relax. There are things to study, too -- a geological survey marker and a metal historical marker (side 1 | side 2) that summarizes the history of the West Fork Community.

There's also a small mystery -- what are the rocks with holes in their centers, piled against a tree trunk in the churchyard? I picked up a similar but smaller rock in the cemetery, that still had its core. Keely thinks they look like pieces of ancient bone, and she may be right. Maybe ancient inhabitants of the area killed and dressed some animals here. I'm curious, but I'll probably never know for sure.

I'm disappointed that I missed a Hymn Sing that was held at Chapel Hill Church on May 30, 2009. I think I would have enjoyed it immensely. It's significant that a columnist from the Clarksville Leaf Chronicle wrote about the event. It demonstrates the community's ties with Clarksville, Tennessee, rather than Hopkinsville, Kentucky (the seat of Christian County).

The Chapel Hill Church is just a very intriguing place. If you're  interested in more of the West Fork area's history, please read the other posts that are labeled  "Barker's Mill".

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Some Memories of Duff, Nebraska

The Duff school, bank, and E.U.B. Church



Duff, Nebraska, was located in the southern part of Rock County, in a broad Sandhill valley. Drained by the Bloody and Skull creeks, the area was originally called the Bloody Valley and now is known as the Duff Valley. The Duff road turned off to the west from Highway 183, about 26 miles south of Bassett.

By the time that we moved to Duff, Nebraska in 1957, the Duff store was closed and the Duff post office had been gone for several years. The post office operated from 1886 to 1901, closed briefly, and then was open again from 1903 to 1953, according to Perkey's Nebraska Place Names by Elton A. Perkey (copyright 1995, Nebraska Historical Society).

I attended Duff Valley District 4 school which was still in its original building, 3 miles west and 1 mile south of Highway 183. The records of attendance in the attic of the school building went back to the late 1800s, when the old people of the community were school children.

The Eldon Horner family lived in the old Duff bank building, about 1/2 mile northeast of the school. My friends and schoolmates, the Horner girls, had their bedroom in the room where the bank had done its business. This is what the Horner girls told me. I don't know when or how long the bank was in business.

The old store building was 4 miles west of Highway 183. Forest Saar lived in the storekeeper's quarters in the back, and the Duff Evangelical United Brethren (E.U.B.) Church met in the big room in the front of the building where the store had been. In the pasture just west of the building, there was a concrete cellar (I am sure it was concrete and I believe it was a cellar). It was all that remained from an earlier store that had burned. (See this link which mentions the Duff Store in 1910. )

The congregation of the Duff E.U.B. Church was very small. I think that on a good Sunday, we might have had 30 people. Some of the people in the valley went to the Methodist church in town, another family or two were Catholic, and others didn't go to church at all.

Our pastor, Brother Harold Koelling, served three country E.U.B. churches, of which the Duff group was the smallest. In 1962, the Duff church was consolidated with the Rose E.U.B. church. (Sadly, the Rose Church is also now closed.)

I have a fairly clear memory of the little Duff church. The room was quite large with wooden pews on both sides of a central aisle. At the front on the right side were the pulpit, a piano, and a communion table with the words "In Remembrance of Me" carved into it. I confess that I thought Arthur Zlomke was the "Me" of that phrase. A metal plaque on the bottom crosspiece of the table clearly stated that the table had been donated in his memory.

A low table and some chairs occupied the area at the left front of the room, where the children's Sunday School class was held. Between the Sunday School table (on the left) and the pulpit (on the right), there was a door that opened to Grandpa Saar's living room. He often came through the door and joined the congregation when it was time for the worship service to begin.

Grandpa Saar was a generous man. Besides giving the space for the church in the front of his building, he also loaned his kitchen and living room for Vacation Bible School classes. His living room window looked out into a lilac bush that was often in bloom during VBS week. One year, a bird had built its nest right against the window, and we could look into it from Grandpa Saar's living room and see the little blue eggs.

(I speak of "Grandpa" Saar because he was the grandfather of the "Saar kids," all of whom I knew well. Marion Saar's four children were my third cousins on my mother's side, and their cousins, Bill Saar's three sons, were relation's relation to me from another side of the family. In addition to all that, all of us were neighbors in the Duff community.)

I remember one series of revival meetings at the Duff Church very well. The evangelist was a man named Elmer Reimer and he was from South Dakota.

Brother Reimer had a collection of crystal wine glasses of all shapes and sizes. He had them lined up on a table, and each glass had a different amount of water in it. He talked about how the glasses had been converted from their former wicked life of serving alcohol to a new life of service to God. Then he wet his index fingers a little and ran them around the rims of the glasses to make a vibrating, resonating musical sound. By switching from glass to glass, he could play hymns and even create harmony. I can still hear the thin, high, warbling sounds.

When I drove through the Duff community several years ago, the Duff church was completely gone. I would never have guessed there had ever been a building there. Before long, no one will even remember it.

Related:
Photos of the Duff Valley
Henry Seier's history of Duff

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Seen at Kirkmansville, KY

A light unto the Gentiles



Driving home from Greenville a few weeks ago, I paused in Kirkmansville and photographed the United Methodist Church, It is a simple structure with little adornment. Its fanciest parts are its arched windows and its steeple. The steeple (or bell tower) reminds me a little of a sturdy lighthouse.

The church sits along Highway 171, and as you can see from the shadows on the building, it is well-shaded in the late afternoon.

I read that the Methodist-Episcopal Church in Kirkmansville was established in 1876. Its 29 charter members were probably the forefathers of the Methodist congregation in Kirkmansville today.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Pleasant Green CME Church

A country church in Christian County, KY



A rural CME ChurchThis little CME church is located a few miles northwest of Hopkinsville. I know of several CME churches in Christian County, and there are probably others I haven't seen yet.

I've rarely heard anyone say the entire name of this denomination. Everyone uses the initials -- CME.

Not long after we moved here, I asked a neighbor lady what CME meant, and she said the letters stood for "Colored Methodist Episcopal." Until just a few minutes ago, I honestly thought that was correct.

The history page of the CME website explains that the denomination was originally called "Colored Methodist Episcopal." I think they mean it was named that, not just called that. The denomination was founded in 1870, to follow the Methodist teachings of John Wesley as set forth in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South's Book of Discipline, but with black leadership.

According to Wikipedia's article about the CME denomination, the name was officially changed to "Christian Methodist Episcopal" during the 1950's. I like the new name. It's dignified, inclusive, and descriptive.

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Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Vaughn Grove Church in Christian County, KY

Life in Christian County, Kentucky...



Country church, Christian County, KY

Kentucky has many rural country churches, and many of them are Baptist churches. We have Free Will Baptists, General Baptists, Missionary Baptists, Independent Baptists and of course, Southern Baptists.

However, the little rural church in the photo above is not a Baptist church. It is the Vaughn Grove Methodist Church, about seven or eight miles east of Hopkinsville on Highway 508.

Over the years, the Methodists have a strong history of ministry in rural Christian County. William Henry Perrin's 1884 history of Christian County, Kentucky, states that there were a hundred homes where Methodist preachers held services even before any churches were built.

This church was once known as Vaughn's Chapel. Here is Perrin's description of the church in 1884:


Vaughn's Chapel of the Methodist Episcopal Church South was organized about 1870 in the Mount Vernon Precinct. It has some 150 members.

Among the early members were Hiram Steele and wife, J. D. Steele and wife, Samuel McClellan and wife, George W. Shaw and wife, Samuel P. Elgin, Robert Berry and wife, John Berry and wife, John Campbell and family and others.

Vaughn's Chapel was a combination of several smaller churches, which were absorbed in its formation. The church edifice was built in 1871, and cost some $2,000.

The pastors have been:
since 1871, J. W. Emerson;
1872-73, William Alexander;
1874, Thomas Bottomley;
1875, D: Spurrier;
1876, J. F. Redford;
1877-78, William T. Moore;
1879-80, James A. Lewis;
1881, T. C. Peters;
1882, J. W. Emerson;
1883, B. F. Orr.


I think I have read or have been told that the original chapel was torn down and the current larger church was built to replace it. I am not sure what year that happened, and I haven't been able to find a reference for it tonight.

This is the front door of the church. The photograph was taken with film probably about ten years ago. Since then, a ramp has been added to the step to accommodate the needs of some of the members. The perfect simple symmetry you see in the photo isn't there anymore.

Sadly enough, the congregation of this little church has dwindled to just a handful. We attended a few times when we first moved here, but since there were no other children in the little congregation at that time, we decided to go to town to the Lutheran church. (We had been attending Lutheran services for several years in Berlin before we moved here.)

A minister comes to conduct a worship service at Vaughn's Grove every other Sunday. On the Sundays that they don't have church, the members still meet for Bible study and prayer.

Several of the members are elderly people who have attended this church since they were babies. They remember the promise of Jesus that, "For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them." And I believe that God honors that promise and their faithfulness.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Shiloh Baptist Church, Christian County, KY

Life in Christian County, Kentucky...



Shiloh Baptist Church in rural Christian Co., KentuckyShiloh Baptist Church


This is the Shiloh Baptist Church in northeastern Christian County, KY. It's about 10 miles from Hopkinsville as the crow flies but farther by the roads. The Shiloh Church Road is named for this church. The church sits beside the Shiloh Church Road, a few miles southeast of a crossroads and tiny community that is known as Carl. The terrain around it is high, rough, and rocky, but the church sits in a little valley surrounded by tall oak trees.

Bar

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Thursday, June 22, 2006

First Days of Summer


Summer whitesSummer whitesWinding roadLong and winding road...



Shelf fungiShelf fungiPetuniasBright midday sun



Across the ravineLooking across 
the ravine
CornfieldOur neighbor's corn crop 
is looking good.



New Ebenezer ChurchNew Ebenezer ChurchTobacco barn and flowersCorner of a tobacco barn



Milkweed blossomsMilkweed blossoms, 
lovely fragrance
Hayes RoadHayes Road through
Honey Grove Hollow

Friday, April 14, 2006

Good Friday Morning

Life in Christian County, Kentucky...



A shed at a Mennonite church, Christian County, KentuckyCarriages in a Mennonite churchyard



Carriages at a Mennonite church, Christian County, KentuckyCarriages in a Mennonite churchyard


Our Mennonite neighbors have been to Good Friday services this morning. I believe they reserve this day for worship and meditation and don't do any work except for the care that is essential for their animals.
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CONTENTMENT: Keep your heart free from hate, your mind from worry, live simply, expect little, give much, sing often, pray always, forget self, think of others and their feelings, fill your heart with love, scatter sunshine. These are the tried links in the golden chain of contentment.
(Author unknown)

IT IS STILL BEST to be honest and truthful; to make the most of what we have; to be happy with simple pleasure; and to be cheerful and have courage when things go wrong.
(Laura Ingalls Wilder, 1867-1957)

Thanks for reading.