Per
a remembrance written by Fred Runkle1, the first Union
Chapel house of worship in South Township was located on the
homestead of the Guilliams family and was built in the late 1850s.
The earliest plat map (1875) shows the Guilliams family having
property in the south half of Section 8. According to Runkle, the
building was moved to Section 7, next to the Union Chapel
Cemetery, sometime after the Civil War.
The cemetery was
established in May of 1861 on land donated by Thomas Runkle and
Meres C. Debord. Early Union Chapel families included the Runkles,
Brassfileds, Guilliams, DeBords, and Moores.2
The first mention of
the Chapel in the newspapers was
in the November 20, 1873 edition of the Weekly Madisonian,
announcing a grange meeting to be held there. The second mention
was an obituary
for Baylis Lake2 in 1874. The first Union Chapel burned in 1891 and a new
one, shown at the right, was built in 1891 and dedicated in
January, 1892.
The following
information about the second chapel's dedication comes from an
article in The Winterset Madisonian of January 8,
1892:
"The dedication of
Union Chapel took place Sunday, Jan. 3d, 1892. It had been
announced and about 10 o’clock the people began to gather. A
little after 11 o’clock the services began.
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Union
Chapel, South Township
Photo
courtesy of Madison County Historical Society.
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The building committee had secured Rev. Geo.
Miller, D. D., of Carlisle, to dedicate the church. He entered the
pulpit in his usual commanding way and preached a very appropriate
and interesting sermon. He had just lifted the congregation to the
right place where he closed.
He then asked for
$350 to cover all
expenses that were back. The committee had supposed they had made
ample provisions for plenty when asking for that sum, but the Dr.
did not let up until he had secured $444, and the church was
solemnly dedicated to God.
It was expressed by some present that that
amount could not be raised, that they evidently didn’t know what
a man they had to raise the money. Not one in fifty could have
been so successful, but the Dr. being an old hand at the business
and an efficient one went way beyond the expectations of any.
The thanks of the community are due to the
building committee for the efficient way in which they handled the
work put in their hands.
The building has cost, including cash and
work, almost $1500, and is a neat little chapel, one that the
community may well be proud of."
Although a reference to the specific
denomination of the Union Chapel has not been found, the preacher
for Baylis Lake's funeral in 1874 was Rev. Butler Bird, for many
years a well known pastor of the Church of Christ.
As with many of the rural churches,
membership waned as convenient transportation and a dwindling
rural population caused many churchgoers to move their membership
to churches in town. The exact date of the closure of Union
Chapel, South Township is unknown but it was most likely by the
1920s. In 1951, the building was sold to Ralph and Jack Hammans
who dismantled and removed it.
At the Old Settlers meeting at St. Charles in
August of 1933, Fred C. Runkle, son of Thomas Runkle, presented a
paper detailing who the early settlers of the Union Chapel
neighborhood were. Although it does not state who actually were
members of the congregation, many of those mentioned likely were
so. A reprint of the paper can be found in the The Winterset
Madisonian, August 31, 1933, page 9.
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