Tag Archives: Baptist Church

Nazarene Baptist Church of Pineland, South Carolina

I have little information on the Nazarene Baptist Church in Jasper County, South Carolina. The building was constructed in 1960. The earliest listed burial on FindAGrave is in 1901 and belongs to Reverend Calvin Lawton. Lawton had two wives and 23 children. Several of his children are buried in the cemetery, so I suspect Lawton was one of the church’s founders. The church is no longer in use, but the cemetery is active.

The Ruins of Harmony Hill Church and Cemetery of Chambers County, Alabama

I learned about Harmony Hill Cemetery when an account I follow posted images of a ledger stone with marbles. Marbles are one of my favorite folk art finds on headstones, and I will document them whenever I can. I was in Chambers County looking for the William “Rock” Jackson grave markers and decided to find this cemetery.

Note the brick piers.

The cemetery can be found on a dirt road west of Oak Bowery. The easiest path into cemetery lead me to what I believe are the remains of the Harmony Hill Baptist Church.

Research has not given me much information. According to FindAGrave, the earliest burial is 1891. The most recent obituary is from 1971, which matches the last burial in the cemetery. Jeffie Allison (1887-1981) is one of five members of the Allison family buried here.

One of the dozens of field stones in the cemetery.
I believe this to be an old grave marker.
This is the grave of Lucy Presley (1871-1927). Her headstone is a common handmade one that can be seen in the South. Her grave ledger is decorated with marbles.
Close-up of Lucy Presley’s headstone
These are the graves of brothers James and Luke Moody. They died within six days of each other in 1903. A records search doesn’t show why they died so close to each other.
Patsie Jones (d. 1922)

If you know more about this church and cemetery, please let me know.

Mt. Olive Missionary Baptist Church of Augusta, Georgia

Researching Mt. Olive Missionary Baptist Church has proven to be complicated. According to tax records, the eclectic Gothic Revival church was built in 1916. Unfortunately, in the Augusta Chronicle, it was hard to decipher which Mt. Olive Baptist Church was being discussed, as there was one in Louisville, Georgia, that had frequent mentions in the paper. I hoped there would be an article about its history, but I do not know the church’s history. I will update the post if I get more information.

Fitzpatrick Baptist Church-Bullock County, Alabama

The Fitzpatrick Baptist Church was established in 1897 in Fitzpatrick, Alabama. The current structure was built in 1909 after a 1908 storm swept through Bullock County and destroyed the congregation’s first church. The church no longer holds services but can be rented out for special occasions.

Mt. Zion Baptist Church and the Albany Civil Rights Institute

Located on W. Whitney Avenue in the southwest part of Albany, Georgia, the Mt. Zion Baptist Church and the Albany Civil Rights Institute visually connect Albany’s past with Albany’s present. Founded in 1865, Mt. Zion Baptist Church has long been a fixture in the Black community in Albany. As a freedmen’s church, it was the first African American Baptist church in Albany. On November 25, 1961, the first Albany Movement meeting occurred at the church. The church played a pivotal role during the Civil Rights Movement and galvanizing activists in Southwest Georgia. It was also the location where the Freedom Singers held their first performance. The meetings were so well attended that people would overflow into the street into Shiloh Baptist Church, serving as a meeting place for activists and a sanctuary for those seeking justice. Leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr, John Lewis, and Ralph David Abernathy attended and spoke at the meetings.

Adjacent to the church, the Albany Civil Rights Institute is dedicated to preserving the rich history of the Civil Rights Movement in Southwest Georgia. Housed in the rehabilitated Old Mt. Zion Baptist Church, the institute features exhibits, interactive displays, and a digital oral history database that bring the stories of the past to life1. Visitors can explore the struggles and triumphs of the movement through photographs, documents, and artifacts that detail the fight for voter registration, nonviolent protest, and economic boycotts. The church underwent significant restoration after the “Great Flood of 1994,” which caused extensive damage to the church.

Connected to the church, The Albany Civil Rights Institute, originally known as the Albany Civil Rights Movement Museum, opened in November 1998. Its mission is to educate about the Civil Rights Movement, especially in Southwest Georgia.

Below are images of the church from the National Register of Historic Places application before it is restored.

In this image, Shiloh Baptist Church can be seen. It would co-host Albany Movement meetings since they were so well attended that people would overflow into the street. Often, presenters would finish at one church, walk across the street, and speak to those who had gathered in the other building.

Mitchell Grove Baptist Church-Cuthbert, Georgia

Mitchell Grove Baptist Church is located on a dirt road south of Cuthbert, Georgia. There is not much printed information on the church. According to FindAGrave, the earliest burial was in 1893. A historic resources survey indicates the church was built in 1894. I believe that is the structure that is in overgrowth. The double front doors and multiple windows on the side of the building indicate a church.

The single-tower white building is in good condition and is still used by the congregation. Obituaries indicate that the cemetery is still active and has remained active throughout the church’s history. The cemetery has a mixture of vernacular and commercial headstones.

Carrie Bankston Harper
Millie Nickson Died April 12, 1937
Plot of Sammie and Ossie Thomas
The double front doors of what could be the original church
While hard to see, several windows could be seen on either side of the church