The history of
Methodism in Earlham is as old as the community itself. When
the town was founded in 1869, thirteen members made up the first
congregation. The Friends Meeting House and the Presbyterian
Church buildings served as a place of worship (every other Sunday)
until a building could be erected. Work on the first church
building began in the summer of 1871, but a severe wind storm
destroyed the framework of that building and the salvaged lumber
was taken to Penn Center and used in the first church there.
The Methodist
continued to use the facilities of the Presbyterian Church until
1886 when they completed work on a frame building located on the
site of the present structure as shown on the right..
Mr. J. E. Walton designed and erected the
building which cost $12,000. On Sunday, July 23, 1911 the
building was dedicated. First services were actually held
before the building was completed. Cornerstone laying
ceremonies were held under the rough-shod roof, hastily constructed
for the occasion on October 18, 1910. Financing the structure exceeded all
expectations with an excess of $2000 raised.
The basement of the church building
was completed and dedicated on November 2, 1911. In 1939 the
Ladies Aid Society contracted a Winterset firm to decorate the
basement walls.
Also in 1939 the heads of the
divisions of the Methodist Episcopal, the Methodist Church South,
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Earlham
Methodist M. E. Church (1886)
United Methodist
- Earlham (1911) Photo courtesy of Google Maps |
and the Methodist Protestant Church united in Kansas City and became
a church with eight million members to be known as the Methodist
Church.
In 1941 a merger of two church
connected groups, the Missionary Society and the Ladies Aid combined
to form the Women's Society of Christian Service.
In 1954 work began on the project of
remodeling the interior of the sanctuary and entry ways. And
in 1958 the basement and kitchen were renovated under the direction
of the Reverend Robert Edwards.
In 1968 the Methodist Church and the
Evangelical Unite Brethren Church merged to become the United
Methodist Church. There is one great significant fact in the
life of the Church of God. It knows no turning back, the only
direction it knows is forward. It is this indomitable will to
achieve which had made possible its progress.
For a list of ministers, see the 1970
Earlham Centennial Book.
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Source:
Earlham Iowa - 1870 - Centennial - 1970, 1970, Centennial Historical Committee. |
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