Tag Archives: Baptist Church

St. John “A” Baptist Church and South Asheville Cemetery

Located in South Asheville, the St. John “A” Baptist Church and the South Asheville Cemetery were originally part of a Black community that was absorbed into Kenilworth. The cemetery and church were not annexed into Kenilworth.

Built in 1929, this brick Gothic Revival church is the third church for the congregation. It is located next to the South Asheville Cemetery, which began as a cemetery for the enslaved. Its first caretaker was George Avery (1844-1938). Believed to be a United States Color Troop member, he returned to Asheville after the Civil War and became the sexton to care for the cemetery.

It is estimated that over 3000 people are buried in the cemetery, which was one of the few places where Black community members of Asheville could be buried. There are only about 100 headstones in the cemetery, though.

The church is now the official steward of the cemetery. When the cemetery became overgrown, volunteers from the church took care of it. Fortunately, the church now receives help from volunteers across the city.

The church and cemetery were put on the National Register of Historic Places

Carr’s Hill Baptist Church: A Historic Landmark in Brevard, North Carolina

If you are south of Brevard, North Carolina, you can glimpse Carr’s Hill Baptist Church through the trees. The congregation began in 1882 as Dunn’s Rock Baptist Church, but they changed their name to honor the generosity of Carr Landreth, who donated the land to build the church in 1903.

The Transylvania County church is still active today, but services are held at a much newer church building. The church still owns and maintains the property.

Historic Webster Baptist Church Overlooks the Tuckasegee River in North Carolina

Over Labor Day weekend, I took a trip to Western North Carolina. With the devastating floods caused by Hutticane Helene, I thought I would share some of the beautiful places I photographed.

The Webster Baptist Church sits on a bluff above the Tuckasegee River in Webster, North Carolina. The river flooded, but I don’t yet know how Webster fared.

The church was built in 1900. Joseph and Lawrence Cowan, a local father and son cabinetmaker duo, built the original furniture, which is still in use today.

It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.

Image from the National Register of Historic Places application

Rabun County’s Head of Tennessee Baptist Church

The Head of Tennessee Baptist Church in Dillard, Georgia, was founded in the 1820s, making it one of the oldest congregations in North Georgia. The first church was a log cabin built in 1827. The current brick structure was built in the 1930s, and it is the fourth structure for the congregation.

The Digital Library of Georgia’s database contains one image of an earlier church structure.

First Baptist Church of Dahlonega, Georgia

Founded in 1870, the First Baptist Church of Dahlonega, Georgia, was a historic Black congregation founded with funds from the Freedman’s Bureau. Residents approached the Bureau to help fund the building of a school on Crane’s Hill, land that was given to them by William Price. Price named Daniel Keith, Henry Castleberry, and Thomas Samuels as trustees of the land.

The Freedman’s Bureau donated $900 for the construction of a school building that the First Baptist Church would also use.

Note: I’ve tried to determine if the current building was rebuilt in the same location as the original church building, but I can’t do so with the maps I can find online.

Reference:

Lund Smith, J. (2001). Negotiating the Terms of Freedom: The Quest for Education in an African American Community in Reconstruction North Georgia. In J. Inscoe (Ed.), Appalachians and race: The mountain South from slavery to segregation (pp. 220-234). The University Press of Kentucky. https://archive.org/details/appalachiansrace0000unse_r2z2/page/n1/mode/2up

Built in the 1840s, Cool Springs Primitive Baptist Church Still Stands Today in Greenville County

The Cool Springs Primitive Baptist Church was organized in the 1830s, and by the 1840s, this wood-frame church was built. The church used this building until the 1950s when a brick church building was erected to replace the wooden building.