USA > Missouri > History of Platte Presbytery; or, Presbyterianism in northwest Missouri > Part 8
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a leading part in public, would always urge others forward and hold up their hands. The latter was a very superior woman and possessed many rare gifts, all fused into a noble Christian character. That sweet spirit was also strong in its influence in the home and the church. It was the living of these two women in the home that led their husbands to come out on the Lord's side."
The Oak Grove Church was organized December 12, 1869, by Rev. E. B. Sherwood, in the Maxwell school house, one mile north of the limits of St. Joseph, with the following members: Huston, Isabel, Melissa and Orlena Bazar, Lorenda and Wm. R. Becraft, Fran- cis N. Brinson, Marion Carswell, Geo. W. Casteel, Martha E. Cox, Clarinda and Jacob Decker, Benton W., Fannie M., Wickliffe and Sarah E. Estes, James P. Gardner, Mary Ann Gilbert, Joshua and Mary Ann Haxton, Biddie and J. W. Mansfield, Rebecca Matthews, Annie E., Charles, John A., Julia, Logan, Mary E. and Susan K. Maxwell, Missouri Ann Murry, John Newman, Cora, Mary Ann and Wm. A. Rhodes, Marion Ann Self, John Sullivan, Sallie C. and Wm. Van Horn and Mary A. Welsh.
The early elders were L. Maxwell, J. Haxton and W. Becraft. Since 1895, H. A. Matthews, A. P. Moor- man, P. H. Woods, G. W. Whitsett and I. Roup have been elected.
The church has been supplied by E. D. Sherwood, W. H. Ilsley, T. D. Roberts, S. F. Wilson, John I. Cur- tis and D. B. Whimster.
In 1871, a frame church costing about $1,400 was built on land donated by Elder Maxwell. In 1904-5, a brick church costing about $5,000 was built on the same site, being "finished through the fidelity and diligence of the pastor, Rev. J. T. Curtis." The manse stands on a half-acre lot.
This church was the outgrowth of a Sabbath school carried on by the Westminster Church of St. Joseph,
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and was, at first and for years, whenever vacant, sup- plied on alternate Sabbaths by the honored pastor of that church. It flourished for years and raised up two faithful ministers, A. M. Reynolds and C. C. Arm- strong, but was finally reduced, by removals, death and the organization of another church in the same neigh- borhood, to a membership of three, and in 1891, of two. Elder Maxwell, with wise foresight, persistently re- fused the disbandment of the church, and the sale of the building. A flourishing church there to-day fully justifies him. Elder Matthews, who furnished most of the above, has been a worthy successor in zeal and efficiency.
The following sketch would be equally in place among the "Early Pioneers."
"Logan Maxwell was born March 25, 1813. in Caldwell county, Ky. His father dying when he was a lad of seven years, he was obliged to look out for himself, and as the schools of that period were con- ducted upon the subscription plan, he received very little education. In 1836, he married Sarah K. Beard of Tennessee, sister of Dr. Richard Beard of Cumber- land Presbyterian fame. She was the mother of eleven children, and died June 17, 1891, aged seventy-five years. In the fall of 1837, he arrived in the state of Missouri, having started two months previous, with his wife and babe, in a one-horse cart. On reaching the Ohio River, he traded his horse for a yoke of oxen. He settled on the land where he lived till the day of his death, June 13, 1904, a wild, uncultivated tract. St. Joseph was then only a mere trading post, four miles distant. He cradled many an acre of wheat where the large business houses of the city now stand, eating his dinner on the hill now occupied by the Court House. His first work, after taking his claim, was to build a log shanty, the floor of puncheon and the roof of clapboards. In order to purchase his first cow he bargained to make 2,500 rails.
"Mr. Maxwell always took an active part in edu-
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cational and religious matters, and was very generous in his gifts for their support, donating a site for the school. He was first a member of a Cumberland church in the country north of the city. At the close of the war he transferred his membership to the Westminster Church. In 1869, meetings were held in the Maxwell school house, and as a result the Oak Grove Church was organized, largely through his influence. Through all the years of its struggle for existence, and for sev- eral years it was kept alive solely by his gifts. In his morning and evening devotions he was never known to fail to pray for its success, and during the last days of his life the building of a new church was his constant theme of conversation with all. His last business transaction was the giving of two per- sonal checks of $1,000, with the request that the old church be torn down and the new one be begun at once. The last service held in the old building was his fun- eral. The beautiful new building stands to-day, a monument of his love and devotion and prayers."
The Mt. Zion congregation was organized March 26, 1870, by Rev. F. M. Miller, with the following members : Wm. J. Arthur and wife, Wm. Brown and wife, Wiley H. Chapman and wife, J. T. Elder and wife, John Evans and wife, George Grace, Wm. James and wife, W. J. McCorkle and wife, Laban Pritchard and wife, Mrs. Janet Robertson, Elmira Sharp and James Weir and wife. J. Weir, J. T. Elder and L. Pritchard were chosen elders.
This church has been served by Revs. F. M. Miller, Leander F. Hayes, W. O. H. Perry, C. D. Powers, J. H. Tharp, James Froman, C. E. Hayes, Arthur E. Perry and S. T. Divinia. The later elders are W. H. Chapman, Paul Norris, Robert Onstalt, John H. Young, S. M. Mayes, John Aitken, Benjamin Cottrell, R. D. Parker and Edward Moore. The house of worship is six miles south of St. Joseph Court House.
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The above has been kindly furnished by Elder W. H. Chapman, Clerk of Session.
This is one of the few churches having a glebe. It has a very large Sabbath school, and is a power for good in the community.
The Rockport Church was organized May 11, 1870, by Revs. J. M. Morrison and W. H. Cummins, and Elder G. R. Luckhardt, with Mrs. E. L. Hawthorn, Robert Lynn, Margaret McMillan, Samuel Morrison, Eliza Snyder, Martha Thompson and Wm. A. Thomp- son as members. R. Lynn was chosen elder.
The Records being imperfect, the following lists may be incomplete : Ministers, J. M. Morrison, E. B. . Sherwood, Luther Dodd, H. T. S. Willis, F. J. Reichert, W. E. Vose, James Kirkwood, Jos. Wood, James E. Leyda, J. A. Currie, R. D. West and John Duncan. Elders: R. Lynn, W. N. Curry, Chas. Shepperson, James H. Filson, Wm. Bentley, Wm. H. Gordon, Prof. J. U. Crosen and L. C. Christian. The church costing about $3,000, was built in 1877.
The above was furnished by Judge W. H. Gordon, Clerk of Session.
The fact that many of the officers of this church have been high county officials has added to its in- fluence, but has also been a drawback because their stay in it has been limited by their terms of office.
This church has long been rich in the possession of Elder Charles Shepperson, a native of Virginia and of a noted ministerial family, who as a popular teacher on the rich, but religiously destitute Missouri bottom lying near, has been also a spiritual teacher and guide to multitudes of youth.
Rev. Joel Kennedy, who began preaching in the Eureka school house in Lincoln township, Caldwell
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county; in April, 1870, organized a church at that point in conjunction with Rev. E. B. Sherwood, on Satur- day, August 13, 1870, with the following members : David and Rachel Cooper, and James M. and Sarah M. Cooper, from the Crooked River Church; Sam'l F. Gallaher, and Thomas B. and Jane Gallaher, from Deersville, O .; Henry W. Botsford from Martinsbur, N. Y., and Charles L. Botsford from Franklin, O .; D. Cooper and H. W. Botsford were elected elders, and S. F. Gallaher, deacon. In the next two days, Mary C. Cooper, Wm. C. Cooper and Mrs. Eliz. Miller were received on profession of their faith. The church was called the First Presbyterian Church of Lincoln Town- ship, but sometimes appears in various published Minutes as Glassville (its nearest post office).
The Pleasant View Church was organized May 28, 1874, at the Baker school house (where Rev. Geo. A. McKinlay had been preaching over a year), by Revs. E. B. Sherwood, J. H. France, C. W. Higgins and Joel Kennedy, a committee appointed by Platte Pres- bytery, with ten members. Of these, John C. and Jane Adams were received by letter from the Lin- coln Church; Robert T. and M. A. Mylar, from the Mirabile Church, and Sarah Lizzie Adams, Joseph M. and Harriet Baker, Miss Jennie M. Baker, and Pleasant M. and Charity E. Shafer on the profession of their faith. J. M. Baker and R. T. Mylar were chosen elders. August ninth, J. C. Adams was elected elder, and P. M. Shafer, deacon.
February 24, 1877, a meeting of the above two con- gregations, moderated by Rev. John F. Clarkson, was held in the Shelleberger school house, when the two churches united under the name of Lincoln, and re- tained all their officers as follows: J. M. Baker, J. C. Adams, R. T. Mylar, T. B. Gallaher and James Tait, elders, and P. M. Shafer and S. F. Gallaher, deacons.
Preaching services were held at various points till 1884, when a house of worship costing over $1,100 was erected at Glassville, on land donated by Aaron -7
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Pfost. In consequence of the coming of a railroad, the building was removed, in 1893, about two miles to Cowgill, and the name of the church changed to Cowgill.
The elders, in addition to those named above, are Alvin Poor, R. H. Whitsitt; J. H. Conley, Wm. Claude Poor, R. A. McPheeters, Samuel C. Ludington and J. H. Whitsitt. .
The church has been supplied by Joel Kennedy, G. A. Mckinlay, J. F. Clarkson, Wm. C. Smith, W. T. Scott, A. B. Goodale, G. E. Northrup, J. T. Boyer, J. W. Todd, James Reed, C. G. Russell, C. E. Edwards. John Wilson, Pastor-at-large, preached frequently from 1893 to 1897, and secured the removal of the church building to Cowgill.
For the above we are indebted to Alvin Poor, Clerk of Session, and elder for twenty-five years, and Rev. James Reed.
Elder G. D. Shewey, of Trimble, Clerk of Session, writes :
The Bethany congregation was organized at the Kelley school house, September 3, 1870, by Rev. Isaac Chivington. The church, a frame building valued at $1,000, is situated four miles northeast of Trimble. It is now supplied by Rev. C. E. Edwards. We regret not having a fuller sketch of this large and important country church.
The Knox Church was organized the second Tues- day of September, 1871, by Revs. T. Morgan, N. H. Smith and D. McRuer, and Elder Wm. Allen, a com- mittee of Platte Presbytery, with the following mem- bers: Walter Gladstone, Wm. C. Gladstone, Peter McPherson, Robert Pringle, James Shillinglaw, Hugh Wallace and John Wallace and their wives, and Mrs.
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Mary T. McRuer. M. Gladstone and H. Wallace were elected elders. These elders and most, if not all the church members came from Scotland, by way of Can- ada. In addition to these, Samuel Maxwell, Wm. C. Gladstone and Alex. Gladstone have been elders. The church has been supplied by Duncan McRuer, John Huston, Wm. Meyer, Carson Reed, James Kirkwood, Duncan McRuer and C. C. Armstrong.
The above has been furnished by Elder Alex. Gladstone, for about twenty years Clerk of Session and the only active elder.
The church building, three and a half miles north- east of Gentry, a new railroad town, and till recently far from any town, is on a broad prairie and visible from afar. The church spiritual has been a beacon light for this whole section, for though meagerly sup- plied with preaching because of its isolation, an ever- green Sabbath school has been maintained, superin- tended these many years most efficiently and attrac- tively by Mrs. Alex. Gladstone.
The Aubery Grove congregation was organized at. Ketron Chapel, September 4, 1871, by Revs. Wm. M. Houston and Wm. S. Davis. The charter members were Hanna Buzzard, Susan T. Callison, Bell Caraway, Jane, Mary B. and Robert B. Foster, Eliz., Margaret, Simeon and Virginia Hamlin, Ella R. and Virginia Hill, John Lockridge, Carrie McCartney, Wm. H. McClung, Net- tie and Sallie E. Miller, Harriet Nickell, Geo. A. Pogue and James and Mary C. Waugh.
In the spring of 1873, the Bethel Presbyterian Church was built and the Aubery congregation began holding services there, so doing till in June, 1890, when the Hopewell Church was completed and ready for use. At that time the name was changed from Aubery Grove to Hopewell.
The roll of ministers is Wm. S. Houston, Wm. S. Davis, James M. Ragan, Wm. N. Nickell, J .H. Tharp,
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L. F. Hayes, J. W. French, John R. Adkins, S. S. Hardin, L. F. Rodgers, M. R. Dougherty and N. M. Tatum. The elders were R. B. Foster, James Waugh, W. H. McClung, Wm. Robinson, Thomas K. Hays, Chas. S. Chamberlain, Geo. C. Goodbar, Dr. N. Hesler, Joseph R. Foster, Robert W. Hill, Homer Musselman and Samuel Gant.
Hopewell united with the Bethel Church (U. S. A.), August 26, 1906.
The above was furnished, in most excellent shape, by Elder Jos. R. Foster, the last Clerk of Session of the Hopewell Church. Since the union the consolid- ated church has prospered greatly.
The Mound City Church was organized May 5, 1872, by Rev. E. B. Sherwood, with the following five members : Andrew Frazer, Mrs. Mary Ann Frazer, W. W. Frazer, Mrs. Jane Glenn and Mrs. Catherine Strickler. W. W. Frazer was elected ruling elder.
The elders who have served the church are W. W. Frazer, S. P. Jewell, Geo. C. Brown, M. M. Smith, W. H. Wett, G. H. Carpenter, W. M. Hamsher, H. K. S. Robinson, C. S. Armstrong, Wm. Hoblitzell and Dr. C. N. Smith; the ministers, M. L. Anderson, W. G. Thomas, J. O. Pierce, Duncan Brown, Willis Weaver, A. W. Benson, A. M. Irvine, S. G. Fisher, A. B. Byram, Jos. M. Wright, Geo. Miller, A. D. Wolfe, H. N. Bullard and E. W. Waits.
The church, costing about $2,000, was erected in 1872, and enlarged in 1881; outlay, $500.
For the above we are indebted to Elder Wm. M. Hamsher, Clerk of Session and main pillar of the church for many years.
This is a real missionary church having two out- stations, Blair and Shiloh.
New Point Church, known as "Hope" for some
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years, was organized September 2, 1872, by Revs. N. H. Smith and R. Cruikshank and Elder P. G. Tyner, in the Cowan school house, one mile northwest of New Point. The first members were Jeremiah Botkins, Wm. and Sarah Coburn, Misses Emma and Nellie Coburn, John G. and Mary E. Cowan, B. O. Cowan, Mrs. Eliz. Graham, V. L. and Hannah Graham, John and Mary Meyer, Miss Anna M. Meyer and Samuel G. Park. The first elders were J. G. Cowan and John Meyer, and they have been followed by Samuel Praisewater, B. O. Cowan, B. F. Praisewater, J. A. Price, E. K. Christen- sen, Wm. F. Bragg and O. P. Botkin.
The church has been supplied by N. H. Smith, Geo. Miller, W. E. Williamson, T. D. Roberts, S. G. Fisher, Willis Weaver, A. B. Byram, C. P. Blayney, W. E. Caldwell, H. P. Alexander and T. D. Roberts (at present).
The frame church, costing about $2,000, all of which was raised at home, was completed in October, 1877. This church has a manse. It has raised up one minister, William Meyer.
While this church, located in an intelligent and prosperous farming community, has never been large, it has always been strong in every sense.
Elder Wilson C. Baldwin, Clerk of Session of the Martinsville Church, writes :
A petition signed by I. N. Wren, James Scott and six others was presented to Presbytery at its session held in Oregon in September, 1872, that a church be organized, and Revs. E. B. Sherwood and D. McRuer, and Elder James Owen were appointed as a committee. The church was organized December 18, 1872, with Archibald Scott, James Scott, son and wife, James Scott, Jr., and wife, Miss Jane Scott, Thomas Scott and wife, Mrs. Mary Stoffle and son, and I. N. Wren and wife as members. A. Scott and
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J. Scott, Jr., were elected elders. Both of these had served as ruling elders in Scotland, the latter in St. Luke's Church, Glasgow.
The church has been supplied by D. McRuer (for over thirteen years), James A. McKay, C. P. Blayney, James Reed and H. A. Brown.
The more recent elders are Walter Murray, W. C. Baldwin, Frank S. Hills, W. Riley Thompson and Thomas Scott.
Services were held in a building owned jointly with the Methodists till 1898, when a neat frame church costing $1,500 was erected.
Education is greatly appreciated in this church which has raised up two ministers, Robert C. and James B. Stone, and several high grade teachers.
The First Presbyterian Church of Trenton was organized May 1, 1873, by Rev. Joel Kennedy, at the residence of Mr. Wm. Donaldson, with five members, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Donaldson, Mrs. Randolph, John A. Reid and Mrs. C. Smith. It soon grew to forty members, when it rented the old Methodist church. Rev. Hiram Chadeayne was the first pastor, and he was followed by Rev. J. M. Crawford who continued in charge till January 1, 1879. In the meantime a commodious church building was erected, and on the morning it was to be dedicated it burned to the ground, involving a loss of $6,800, with an insurance of only $3,000. The church was young and vigorous, and at once built a very elegant structure which was dedicated June 18, 1876.
The organization became involved in a lawsuit at this time through the indebtedness occasioned by the loss of their first building. The case was decided in favor of the defendants, but Presbytery appointed a committee to compromise the case, and the result of the arbitration was that the church was turned over to the mortgagees in the fall of 1879.
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The "First Church" was disbanded, and May 19, 1880, the "Hodge Presbyterian Church" was organ- ized with the following members: Miss Helen Bab- cock, Mrs. Ed. Benson, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Dobson, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Donaldson, Mr. and Mrs. John Flan- igan, Miss Jennie Lafferty, Miss Tillie McGuire, Mrs. Randolph, Mrs. C. Smith, Miss Flora Tinsman, Mrs. Geo. F. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. White and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Zinsien. They purchased the old South Methodist church, and had it refitted throughout at an expense of $2,300 for the whole.
Rev. Francis E. Thompson was called in 1879; Rev. Geo. Miller, in 1881, and he was followed by Rev. Alvin B. Goodale, who had been a missionary in Tur- key, and whose daughter, Emma, went to Chili as Mrs. James F. Garvin, during his pastorate here.
On the afternoon of July 13, 1883, Trenton was visited by a destructive windstorm which completely destroyed several buildings, among them the church built in 1876, which "was blown into the street and the whole building reduced to kindling wood." The Hodge church was moved about six inches by the wind and damaged to the extent of $500.
Rev. G. H. Putnam supplied the church a year in 1886-7, and was succeeded by Rev. John Knox. Dur- ing his pastorate a manse was built. Rev. Wm. Y. Jones, now a missionary in Japan, supplied the church a part of the year 1893, and followed by Rev. John W. Crawford. Rev. John Creighton served the church from 1897 till 1901, and Rev. Alfred Fowler, the fol- lowing year. In October, 1902, Rev. Geo. H. William- son was called, and remained as pastor-elect till March, 1905, during which time the present attractive and convenient edifice valued at $8,000, was built, and dedicated, free of debt, August 7, 1904. In December of the same year a series of evangelistic meetings was held, and a large number of young people, mostly from the Sabbath school, united with the church. Rev. Wiley K. Wright was installed in 1905, but after a
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short and happy pastorate was obliged to resign on account of ill health. While he was pastor the present commodious manse was purchased for $2,200. In the- fall of 1906, the church gave a call to Rev. Edmund S. Brownlee, who entered upon his work with this church, December 1, 1906.
The above was condensed from a very full his- tory, furnished by Mr. Brownlee, the present efficient and acceptable pastor.
The list of elders, probably incomplete, is Wm. Donaldson, John Flanigan, J. M. White, T. B. Cook, E. K. Hunter, Geo. DeLano, R. P. Johnston, E. C. Lightner, Henry Baker, J. L. Lafferty, C. F. Palmer, R. F. Keith and R. W. Allerdice.
A number of families in Hopkins, desiring a church of their own order, corresponded with Rev. E. B. Sherwood. He came, and after thoroughly can- vassing the town and holding some services, appointed Saturday, May 31, for a meeting to organize. Elders John M. Bell and Geo. H. Hotaling assisted in the organization. Letters were presented by Wm. K. and Mary Adams, Mrs. Sarah Bender, Mrs. Clarissa Brad- ley, Henry P. and Sarah L. Dryden, Mrs. Mary Green, Mrs. Jennie Heald, Geo. H. and Mildred Hotaling, David L. Latschar, Mrs. Mary E. Martin and Mrs. Martha A. and John W. Walker; and Mark B. Bradley was received on profession of faith. On Sunday, June 1, 1873, the organization of the First Presbyterian Church of Hopkins was consummated, W. K. Adams and G. H. Hotaling being elected elders, and H. P; Dryden and D. L. Latschar, deacons.
Bi-monthly services were held in the M. E. Church till January, 1874, and then in Union Hall till the Presbyterian church, costing about $2,400 was com- pleted and occupied in January, 1876. This building, which was enlarged, remodeled and fitted out with all conveniences in 1901, at a cost of $2,200, burned down
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in 1904. A new brick-veneered edifice, valued at $7,500, was completed in 1906.
The church has been served by Revs. E. B. Sher- wood, A. D. Workman, W. H. Ilsley, Wm. C. Smith, A. B. DeLong, F. Lonsdale, Wm. McPheeters, H. B. Mays, A. D. Seelig, E. Aston and K: J. Cardy ; and Elders G. H. Hotaling, W. K. Adams, John Crepps, Josiah Strain, R. P. Johnson, A. C. Kennedy, John C. Stewart, Warren L. Robb, John H. Aiken, Wm. Hepburn, C. L. Adams and Chas. S. Evans.
Four young men who joined this church on pro- fession of faith, afterwards dedicated their lives to" the ministry, viz .: T. Morris Hillman, Albert W. McGlothlan, Ernest W. Symonds and T. Henry Hep- burn; and two ladies, Miss Helen Goodsil, now Mrs. L. J. Davies, and Miss Mary Richardson, now Mrs. J. Ashley Fitch, went as missionaries to China.
Most of the above is taken from a more detailed account given by Miss Pearl Kennedy, a deeply afflicted but devoted and tireless worker; and the rest was furnished by A. C. Kennedy, who has served as elder for twenty-five years, and as Clerk of Session for about twenty.
In the address of the Pastor of the Westminster Church on his Twenty-fifth Anniversary in 1893, it was said : "In looking over the city for a needy field, it was found there was no place of worship north of Robidoux, except the African Methodist Church on Third street, while there were several thousand people living along the valley. A lot was bought on Third and Isabelle for $600, and a small chapel built at a cost of $960. The house was dedicated and a Sunday school opened in it in September, 1869.
This building was known as Westminster chapel, and in it the North Presbyterian Church was organ- ized October 7, 1873, by Revs. H. Bullard and E. B. Sherwood, and Elder John DeClue, with the following
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members : Edward and Sarah Biddle, B. D. and Julia Elliott, Miss Maggie Frank, Miss Sallie Leininger, Miss Alice Moore, J. F. and Mary A. Riggs, Mrs. Mary Vance and Miss M. Vance. B. D. Elliott and J. F. Riggs were elected elders then, and since then, J. D. McClain, Eugene Ayres, J. D. Walker, H. A. Matthews, E. P. Adams, J. A. Montgomery, W. H. Gaugh, C. W. Parcells, A. C. Hayes, Chas. Aldrich, C. M. Miller, A. A. Elliott, J. C. Dauerlein, K. White, G. E. McDaniel and J. C. Lynch. The following pastors have served the church: W. H. Ilsley, T. D. Roberts (twice), Dun- can Brown, J. E. Brown, E. G. Moore, Frank Lons- dale, Geo. H. Williamson, U. G. Schell, A. M. Reynolds and A. L. Hall-Quest.
This church has never been large, but has done a great work among the young, the Sabbath school numbering as high as 300. In the fall of 1889, a brick church, fifty-four by sixty feet, was erected at a cost of $7,000, which was raised entirely at home. The name of the church was changed to Third Street, October 19, 1891. "The church is now in a flourishing condition, being self-supporting and owning property worth $8,000, free of debt."
For the above we are indebted to the venerable first elder, who is still in the harness, and his son, Elder A. A. Elliott.
The Akron Church was organized in December, 1873, by Revs. D. McRuer and Wm. Reed, with the following members: David and Mary Frazier, Mrs. Eliz. Frazier, Mrs. Emily (Andrew) Frazier, Mrs. Emily (Robert) Frazier, Joseph Heasley and wife, Mrs. Rosanna McDonald, A. M. and Mary E. Morgan, Geo. and Frances E. Morgan, Mrs. Nancy Morgan, and Henry and Louisa Taff. D. Frazier and A. M. Mor- gan were elected elders, and they have been followed by Wm. Frazier, A. L. Ammons, E .G. Poland, J. A. Frazier, Geo. Morgan, Walter Bishop and A. C. Sallee.
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