Home Mount Vernon Church of the Brethren turns 150
News

Mount Vernon Church of the Brethren turns 150

Contributors

mount-vernonOn Sunday, October 9th, the Mount Vernon Church of the Brethren will celebrate its 150th Anniversary Homecoming.

The church, located at the intersection of U.S. 340 and Mount Vernon Road, can trace it roots back to the summer of 1866. The first recorded services were held in a grove of trees in Stuarts Draft near the site of the present day church. Reverend James R. Gish conducted the services and helped guide the early development of the church. A solemn artifact, a huge weathered wooden plank with the “Mt. Vernon” chiseled into it, still remains, hanging over a doorway in the church foyer. The sign along with a display of memorabilia from the past serve as a reminder to the history and traditions of the church and community.

The first church council met in the house of Elias Kindig in 1866. Barren Ridge Brethren ministers served the early years of the church until the election of E.D. Kindig June 5th, 1871. The following year the Henry C. and Margaret Kindig conveyed the deed for the church site. The original plot consisted of one acre, one rod, and 24 poles. A small brick meeting house was constructed on this site and was called the Mount Vernon German Baptist Church. Margaret Kindig, Susan Stump, and Emma Bocock deeded the land for the cemetery in 1889.

Additions and renovations are reported to have begun in 1898 with an added kitchen. As demand and technology grew many improvements were made to the existing structure. In the early 60s a new sanctuary, fellowship hall, class rooms, modern kitchen, public address system, and heating plant were added.  Recent projects include the expansion of parking, new wireless communications, and remake of the church fellowship hall in the spring of 2012.

Guest minister for the 150th celebration will be former minister Grant Simmons. Services will begin at 11:00 A.M. and coordinated by Interim minister Dwight Roetto and Choral Director Martha Gwinn. The service will also feature a selection of songs by Dwight and Linda Burkholder. Following the service will be a “covered dish” luncheon in the church fellowship hall. The fellowship hall will have a series of displays highlighting the history of the church as well as its membership. The celebration is open to all.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

northern virginia
Politics, Virginia

We’re giving an Austrian company $5M in tax dollars to locate its HQ in Roanoke

Server racks in server room data centers
Politics, Virginia

Clean Virginia putting pressure on Spanberger, House Dems over data center tax breaks

A powerful environmental lobby is pushing back at Gov. Abigail Spanberger and House Democrats for siding with data center developers over tax breaks that cost the state $1.9 billion a year.

Kirby Dean JMU
Basketball

Former VMI Basketball assistant Kirby Dean returns to D1 roots in new role

Kirby Dean is the former head basketball coach at Waynesboro High School and EMU, a Division III program he took to the Elite Eight in 2010 in a seminal moment in the school’s athletic history.

Folarin Balogun
Etc.

Birthright citizen stars for USMNT in 4-1 win over Paraguay in World Cup opener

police car arrest lights
Local

Seven arrested after wild pursuit through Waynesboro, Staunton, Augusta County

white house ufc
Etc., Politics

Trump could get ‘damaging wind,’ ‘heavy rain’ on his UFC-themed birthday party

christopher s. shifflett staunton
Local

Staunton: Man wanted in Wednesday shooting arrested, in custody