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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
January 27, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Friday, January 27, 2006
Lectures to Raise Money to Build the "Huguenot Memorial Forest Church"
Building in Pelham Manor
On July 9, 1876 (the first Sunday after the Fourth of July that year), the
Pelham Manor Church we know today as Huguenot Memorial Presbyterian Church
opened the doors of its first church building for worship. The little
wooden building was known for decades thereafter as the "Little Red
Church". That first Sunday, The Rev. C.E. Lord, D.D. delivered the sermon.
He spoke on “The Religious History of the Huguenots in America, and
Reasons for the Erection of Huguenot Memorial Church”.
Raising money to build the Little Red Church was difficult given that the
nation was in the throes of a financial depression that followed the
Financial Panic of 1873. One of the ways that money was raised was through
"lectures" during which money was solicited from attendees in support of
the construction of what was called at the time the "Huguenot Memorial
Forest Church". Such lectures were announced to congregations at churches
in the region. Congregants were invited to attend.
One such example appears in a newspaper account of the services held by
Plymouth Church on March 21, 1875. According to the account, during the
service led by the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher that day, Reverend Beecher
announced "a lecture by Hon. David Dudley Field in aid of the Huguenot
Memorial Forest Church, now building at Pelham". See Conscience
And Its Auxiliaries - Sermon by Rev. Henry Ward Beecher Yesterday,
N.Y. Times, Mar. 22, 1875, p. 2.
Only a few days later, an announcement for the same lecture appeared in
The New York Times. It read:
"Hon. David Dudley Field will deliver his popular lecture, 'Voyaging
Around the World,' to-morrow evening, in the Elm Place Congregational
Church, near Fulton avenue [Brooklyn], in aid of the Huguenot Memorial
Forest Church, at Pelham."
City and Suburban News . . . Brooklyn, N. Y. Times, Mar. 26,
1875, p. 12.
Such efforts played an important role in the construction of the Little
Red Church. The littled wooden church building stood for nearly forty
years at Four Corners in the Village of Pelham before it was replaced with
the magnificent stone church building that remains today.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
Click here to see a
single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:02 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog
Posting for January 27, 2006.
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