xt7gms3k0z8c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7gms3k0z8c/data/mets.xml Illinois Historical Records Survey United States. Work Projects Administration. Division of Community Service Programs. Illinois. Governor. Illinois Illinois Historical Records Survey United States. Work Projects Administration. Division of Community Service Programs. Illinois. Governor. 1942 xii, 165 p.: maps 28 cm. UK holds archival copy for ASERL Collaborative Federal Depository Library Program libraries and the Federal Information Preservation Network. Call Number FW 4.14:Il 6c/3 books English Chicago. Ill.: Illinois Historical Records Survey : Illinois Public Records Project This digital resource may be freely searched and displayed in accordance with U. S. copyright laws. Illinois Works Progress Administration Publications Archives--Illinois Cumberland Presbyterian church in Illinois Church buildings--Illinois Registers of births, etc Illinois Illinois--Statistics, Vital Inventory of the Church Archives of Illinois. Cumberland Presbyterian church, 1942 text Inventory of the Church Archives of Illinois. Cumberland Presbyterian church, 1942 1942 1942 2020 true xt7gms3k0z8c section xt7gms3k0z8c ERSITV OF KENT Inglumnlfflfjlum VIIIJLHIlDlllufllKflHBHI‘IJI SE , I'NVtNIUHYUFTHEflHURflH ARCHIVES urmmms IAN flHlJflflH snowmen wsmcmcm if? INVENTORY OF THE CHURCH ARCHIVES I OF ILLINOIS CUMBERLAND PREfiYTHUAN CHURCH To bring together the records of the pest and house them in buildings where they will be preserved for the use of men living in the future, a nation must believe in three things. It must believe in the past. It must believe in the future. It must, above all, believe in the capacity of its people so to learn from the past that they can gain in judgment for the creation of the future. — Franklin Delano Roosevelt INVENTORY OF THE CHURCH ARCHIVES OF ILLINOIS CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Prepared by Illinois Historical Records Survey Division of community service programs WOrk Projects Administration Sponsored by The Governor of Illinois Chicago, Illinois Illinois Historical Records Survey Illinois Public Records Project beruary 1942 Historical Records Survey Projects Sargent B. Child, National Director Thomas R. Hall, State Director Research and Records Section Harvey E. Beoknell, National Director Willard N. Hogan, Regional Supervisor Frank J. Morris, State Chief Division of Community Service Program Florence Kerr, Assistant Commissioner Mary Gillette Noon, Chief Regional Supervisor Evelyn S. Byron, State Director WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION Howard 0. Hunter, Commissioner George Field, Regional Director Charles P. Casey, State Administrator new... .l_..__.__ __..__b_~ .- WW.-V. . _< Asumwufi _..u. ins...“ W- -. . FOREWORD With the assistance of the Historical Records Survey of the work Projects Administration, the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Illinois enjoys the opportunity of having an accurate record made of its presbyterial and individual church history. Here,in- cluded in one volume, is a history of the Church in Illinois and data on individual churches. The latter items include origin, first services, first minister, first building , subsequent pastors, buildings, current church structure and architecture. The understanding and cooperation of the ministers of the Pres— byteries have been essential, of course, for the completion of this significant work. I know that they have been glad to help. L. M. Drinkall Stated Clerk of Illinois Synod Cumberland Presbyterian Church PREFACE This inventory of the records of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Illinois is the fourth publication of the Illinois Historical Records Survey in the field of church archives. As such it is part of a nationawide series being compiled by Historical Records Survey through- out the country. In Illinois the program was started in March 1941. The ultimate goal is to survey the records of more than 8,000 churches in the state belonging to 138 denominations and to publish the data ob- tained in the form of an inventory for each denomination or unit thereof. The inventories are principally designed to provide the clergy, church officers, religious organizations, public officials, historians, social scientists, genealogists,-and the general public with a system- ized listing of ecclesiastical archives for denominational depositories and for both active and defunct churches. Whereever possible, each church entry notes essential historical facts on the founding, develop- ment, and buildings of the church and the names of the first settled and current pastors. Record listings give the title, inclusive dates, description, and location of each record. In addition, each inventory contains a fully documented historical sketch of the denomination in the ecclesiastical area and_a section on the structure and organization of the denomination. Illustrative maps, charts, and tables, a biblio» graphy, and a place-name and subject index also are included. While it is hoped that the utilization of these inventories will result in a keener appreciation of the historical value of church records and lead to greater efforts for their preservation, the present national ' emergency has served to point out another more immediate use to which they may be put. Many persons who are required to furnish birth certifi- cates for employment or other purposes, find that their births are not registered. They are compelled to turn to baptismal records for the information necessary to the securing of a certificate. The recognition of church recordation of births is part of the national plan for uniform legislation in all statbs on delayed registration of births; with the movement now well under way, these inventories can prove helpful in as- certaining the accessibility of such records. A Guide to Church Vital Statistics Records in Illinois has already been compiled‘for the more than 2,000 Illinois—churches surveyed to date, and is now in the process of publication. This preliminary edition will be followed by other volumes as the records of additional churches are surveyed. Other activities of the Survey in public archives are the publica- tion of inventories of Federal, state, and municipal records. Guides to manuscript depositories and collections, and calendars of certain selected manuscript collections are being produced by the manuscripts section of the Archives Division. A separate diviSion of the Survey -Vii- - viii - is engaged in the production of checklists of early American imprints. (For lists of Illinois publications, see p. 165—165.) This extensive program had its inception in 1935 when a nation- wide Historical Reoords Survey was organized as part of the Works Progress Administration, now the Work Projects Administration. Under the administration of the Division of Professional and Service Projects, the program was technically supervised by Dr. Luther H. Evans until March 1940, when he was succeeded as National Director by Sargent 3. Child. Since February 1941, the Survey in this state has been part of the Illinois Public Records Project. The present official sponsor is the Honorable Dwight H. Green, Governor of Illinois. The inventory was prepared for publication by the church archives section under the direction of Paul M. Reid, Church Editor. Margaret Smith wrote the historical sketch. The individual church entries were compiled by Ida Beatty, Daisy Foxx, and Carl Iverson. Harry Watts drew the maps and charts. Collation was supervised by Edward J. McDonough, Format Editor. Stenciling and mimeographing were done under the direc- tion of Ethel Welzant. The field survey was accomplished under the supervision of Kenneth C. Blood, Victor C. Karcher, J. J. McMurray, and David D. McGraw. Grateful acknowledgement for their cooperation is made to all pastors and officials of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Illinois. Special appreciation is accorded to Rev. L. M. Drinkall, Stated Clerk of Illinois Synod, for his letter which forms the Foreword to this volume and to the Stated Clerks of the Presbyteries. The inventory of the records of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Illinois will be available for distribution to church depositories, government officers, libraries, schools, and other accredited institu- tions. Requests for information concerning this and other publications of the Illinois Historical Records Survey should be addressed to the State Director, 1400 West washington Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois. 5 THDMAS R. HALL State Director - Historical Records Survey February 10, 1942 of Illinois TABLE OF CONTENTS Forewerd Preface Explanatory Notes and Abbreviations Historical Sketch Denominational Divisions Churches Bibliography County and Town Index of Active Churches Subject Index List of Publications - Illinois Historical Records Survey _j_x.. 53 65 143 145 147 163 EXPLANATORY NOTES AND ABBREVIATIONS Church entries are arranged chronologically by date of origin, whether the church is active, transferred, dissolved, or defunct. The title line of the church entry gives the official name of the church, the date it was organized, the date it ceased to function if transferred, dissolved, or defunct, the street or rural address, the town and the county, wherever this information was available.. The date of organization refers to the formal establishment of the church rather than to the date when services were first held in the community. hierever full names, tenures, and educational background of" clergymen were disclosed to the compilers, they have been incorporated. This also is true in respect to authors of publications, manuscripts, cited page numbers, and dates and number of volumes of church organi- zation records in depositories or in the hands of custodians. Where no address appears for a clergyman or for other church officials, the add ess is simply the town given in the title line and there are no street designations. All available information concerning the location and history of dissolved and defunct churches has been included in this inventory. Records are kept in the church unless otherwise indicated. Wherever the register notation reads, "included in Session Minutes," the register data form a separate section of the volume labeled "Session Minutes." Where the notation regarding financial or other records reads, "incorporated in Session Minutes," this simply means that some, but not necessarily complete or all, such reports are in these minutes. Where entries show no records, no information on them was available; in most cases such records have been lost or destrOyed. With the exception of four churches, records of all active churches in the state were inventoried by field workers at the respective churches. The records of Ewing-McLin, Foster, and Illinois presbyteries have been surveyed; those of Lincoln—Decatur Presbytery and the Synod of Illinois have not. These exceptions are due to the transfer of field personnel to national defense work. In addition, records of the Cumberland presbyh teries and synods on file at the State Historical Library in Springfield -xi- — xii — and in various depositories of the Presbyterian Church in the USA., situated in Illinois, have been inventoried. 1832. Ante Ave. c. Cumb. T? .LJn hdw. ibid. mi. ms. N. NE. NW. op. cit. I). post q.v. Rev. RFD. S. SE. St. SW. twp. v. W. Some of these records date back to before Avenue about Cumberland Presbyterian East handwritten refers to last single source cited mile(s) manuscript North Northeast Northwest in the work cited page(s) after which see Reverend Rural Free Delivery South Southeast Street Southwest township volume(s) west current l-HSTORICAL. SKETC H CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN Ci-IURCH H Origin of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church At the beginning of the nineteenth century the Scotch—Irish pioneers, pushing over the Appalachian Mountains, had brought the Presbyterian Church into the wilderness of the Indian country. This body of doctrine and polity, a product of European culture, was not well adapted in certain respects to frontier conditions in the American West. For this reason several schisms occurred in the trans—Appalachian branch of the Presbyterian Church during the time when the frontier was dominant in this region. When the church proved to be too rigid in procedure and creed to deal adequately with some of the new circumstances encountered in pioneer life, there was a split and the formation of a new denomination. It was in this fashion that the Cumberland Presbyterian Church came into existence. Ehe Revival of 1800 One of the cornerstones of the Confession of Faith of the Presbyterian Church in the eighteenth century was "predestinetion", the idea that "those of mankind predestined to life" had been ”elected to salvation" while others had been "reprobated to eternal p0rdition."2 Thus the devout among the Presbyterians in the new land listened to the fatalistic notion that they had been predestined to be the ”elect” and that their salvation was therefore assured. But when Rev. James NeCready. a Presbyterian minister who had been stirred by the leaven of the frentier, began to preach about ”man‘s free agency, accountability, and total depravity, the necessity of repentance, faith, regeneration, and sanctification . . ."3 a great religious awakening took place, as people demanded the means of salvation. Ordination pf Ewing and King The Revival of 1800 which spread rapidly through the Cumberland country where McGready was working, made demands for ministers which 1. See: William Warren Sweet, Religion on the American Frontier, 11. Egg Presbyterians, chap. 4, extracts—from Minutes of * Transylvania Presbytery 1786, Minutes of Cumberland Presbytery 1803-1806, Minutes of Synod of Kentucky 1802—1811. Benjamin Wilburn McDonnold, History 2: the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, chap. 1—9. John Vent Stevens, The Genesis of the Cumberland Church. '2. From the Westminister Confession of Faith ns—quoted in McDonnold, 92' .92.?" p' 69' 8. Franceway Ranna Crossitt, EEE Life and Times 2: Finis Ewing, p. 41. _ 3 _ Historical Sketch were far greater than the Presbyterian Church was able to supply. The Book of Discipline required that candidates for ordination as ministers meet certain educational requirements. These specifications were not easily met in the virgin forests where institutions of learning were few, leisure for study hardly existed, and poverty was the prevailing condition in the newly settled land. ~ In 1802 the Presbytery of Transylvania, embracing a large section of Tennessee and Kentucky. accepted four men~—Alexander Anderson, Finis Ewing, Samuel King, and Ephraim McLean-— to whom it gave authority to act as "ethrters" for the Presbyterian Church. All these men were of rather mature years with families to be provided with food and protected from the Indians. They had had no time to acquire a college education. Nevertheless, a few years later Ewing and King were ordained by Cumberland Presbytery which in the meantime had been split off from Transylvania Presbyteny. This action, together with other irregularities in this Presbytery, was investigated by the Synod of Kentucky which found that not only had the Presbytery accepted men of inferior academic training for its service, but that it had required these men to accept the Confession of Faith only in part. A loophole had been allowed through which the revival ministers escaped subscribing to the doctrines of the Westminister Confession of Faith which were repugnant to them. It was the fact that the revivalists were, in the words of the Minutes of the Synod of Kentucky, "erroneous in sentiment" that proved to be the most stubborn stumbling block to church unity, rather than the fact that they were "illiterate." After several years of controversy the Cumberland ministers were suspended from the church by the Synod of Kentucky. Establishment 9f the First Cumberland Presbytery While these events were taking place, the Revival had been spreading rapidly. The cleavage between the revival party and the anti~revival party became wider with each new agitation of the fundamental differences between them. When the reviVal ministers were barred from participation in the Presbyterian Church polity they soon found it necessary to establish an independent presbytery in order to administer the more than sixty con- gregations which they had organized. Therefore, on February 4, 1810, three ministers of the revival party-~Revs. Finis Ewing, Samuel King, and Samuel McAdow——met at the home of the latter in Dickson County, Tennessee, and constituted the independent Cumberland Presbytery. Although this step proved to be the first move in the foundation of a nedeenomination, there was no intention at this time of the part of the revivalists to break away permanently from the Presbyterian Church. Establishment of Cumberland Synod The expansion of the movement was so rapid that by 1813 it Was necessary to divide the original presbytery into three presbyteries-~ Elk, Logan, and a new and smaller Cumberland Presbytery. A Cumberland‘ Synod was organized in October of the same year in Sumner County, tch n8 ling \ of :wing. 1thc ;heless, W' is 1.8 >nly sters 3f Lsts 5 in rch 11 years 1 by ing aces ion abli Sh con- three amuel nd Historical Sketch Tennessee. At this time there were sixteen ordained ministers within its bounds. The new Synod immediately set to work on the revision of the 'Westminister Confession of Faith, a work that had been in progress since the organization of the first Cumberland Presbytery. The new creed which was adopted unanimously by the Synod embodied much of the Westminister Confession of Faith without change, but such notions as "predestination," "reprobation," and "fatality" were omitted or liberalized. The emerging denomination stood for a modified and humanized Calvinism. It was on this platform‘ that the new church structure was built. The Cumberland Presbyterian Church of the United States of America, as the new denomination came to be Called, eventually comprised, at the height of its strength in 1906. almost 3,000 churches populating an area stretching from Texas to Michigan, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Planting the Cumberland Church in Illinois Even before the church had become a fully independent denomination it had begun to spread into the adjoining states. The seed of the new church had sprouted in Dickson County, Tennessee, in Eebruary 1810. The nearby Tennessee and Cumberland rivers were highways of travel into Illinois, and a few years after the founding of the new sect its mem- bers had begun to penetrate the wilderness of the Illinois Territory. These pioneer Cumberland Presbyterians left few written records. Dr. J. B. Logan writing the history of the Illinois branch of the church in 1878. deplored the scarcity of reliable information about the spread of the movement in the early days. The best accounts he could obtain were from letters and papers written half a century after the occurrence of the events described. The First Cumberland Presbyterians in Illinois Logan believes that the Tagert family, the first Cumberland Pres- byterian family to settle in Illinois, arrived in 1813. Thié family W~3 followed by other families, both Presbyterian and Cumberland Presbyterian. and soon a colony developed on the Illinois side of the Ohio and Wabash rivers. In 1815 an itinerant Cumberland Presbyterian minister, John Barnett from Tennessee, visited the settlers around Golconda in Gallatin (now Pope) County and preached what was probably the first Cumberland Presbyterian sermon in the state.4 He Was followed by l. A further revision of the Cumberland Confession of Faith was made in 1882. 2. J. B. Logan, History of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Illinois. Logan, 3p. cit., p. 13,16. Logan, 2p, cit., p. 14,17. «>0: I Historical Sketch missionaries who came from the Cumberland country to work among the settlers in the river counties. In 1819 the Western Missionary Board of Kentucky sent Rev. David Wilson McLin to "ride and preach" in the new state. Like the majority of the people who populated Illinois in this period McLin had been born in one of the seaboard states of the south, and his parents were of Scotch—Irish descent. He had come to Tennessee and had been converted in the Revival of 1800. The new inde— pendent Presbytery of Cumberland had ordained him in 1814, after which he had been active in the work of the new denomination in Tennessee and Kentucky until he came to Illinois in the fall of 1811. There he settled near Seven Mile Prairie in White County where a colony of southerners had made their homes.1 ‘ Hopewell: The First Cumberland Church in Illinois When Rev. McLin arrived in the southeastern corner of Illinois a Presbyterian church had already been established in White County near what is now Sacramento by Rev. James McGready. Sharon Church, organized 1; in 1816, was the first Presbyterian church in the state.2 A few years I after the founding of Sharon Church McGready died, and a part of the congregation banded together under McLin and on June 18, 1819 organized a Cumberland Presbyterian church-~the first church of this denomination in the state.3 The name of this church appeared for the first time in the Minutes of the fall 1819 meeting of Logan Presbytery. This record shows that Seven Mile Prairie congregation, as it was then called, had a representative at this meeting. Later the name of the church was changed to Hopewell, and in 1868 the name was again changed to Enfield. It was here that many of the fathers of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Illinois got their training.’ One of the m0st outstanding men to be ordained at the Hopewell Church was Joel Knight, who later wrote some historical sketches of the pioneer days of the Cumberland Church in Illinois. According to the account given by Knight,5 McLin and the members of the Hopewell congregation built a log meetinghouse shortly after the : ~ 1. See: McDonnold, op. £13., p. 92. Letter from M. L. McLin, Sherman, ' Texas (undated). Ms. from Rev. L. M. Miller, Enfield, Illinois (undated) Letter from Rev. J. T. Borah, Rienze, Mississippi (undated), in 108”n, pp. 913., p. 146,148,150. 2. See: Inventory of Church Archives of Illinois, Cairo Prenbrt“f‘. D. 6.7 Hereinafter cited as Cairo Presbyte_.. mu” 3. Augustus Theodore Norton, History of the Presbyterian Church in the State of Illinois, p. 19. _— _— 4. McDonnold, 3p. git., p. 165. 5. Logan, 2p. £13., p. 19. ketch is— 1nd ttled hurch 1’1, undated) cann, Historical Sketch organization of the church in 1819. Information from another source1 _ indicates that this first log building was erected in 1823 a mile south of Enfi-eld. Thi.s church joined the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America in the 190? reun10n. and5 it‘ is active as a Presby— terian USA church today. . - Bear Creek Church :5: : While the Cumberland Church was developing iln White County nd other counties in the southeastern part of the- state,_tnc new denomination had spread to southwestern Illinois. This part of the state had budn a focus of population since 1700. The ”American Bottoms, " a strip the Miss— issippi flood plains from the bluffs of Alton south, oi‘fered rich farming lands to the ploneers.“ It W8S to this region that Rev. Green Prior Rice came, probably as early as 1815. By i1817-he had opened a small store an< established his home at Hill’s Fort, latrer. t.o become Greenville. He was therefore the first Cumberland _Présbyterian minister to settle in the state, having preceded Rev. McLin by at least a year. Rev. Rice, too, had come from the old Cumberland Countnyif He had been a candidate under the care of the first Cumberland presbytery, which was also probably the presbytery to ordain him. In september 1817, Rice held a camp meeting near the bottom lands around present—day‘Edwardsville, in Madison County. Another Cumberland Presbyterian minister, Rev. William Barnett, the brether of John Barnett, was sent from Kentucky'to take part in the meeting. Later, many of the settlers around Edwardsville moved eastward to the timbered country of the newly organized Bond County. Here in June 1819, a second camp meeting was held by Rev. Rice assisted by two other Cumb- erland Presbyterians, Robert D. Morrow and John Carnahan. At this time it was decided to meet later in the fall of that same year, 1819, for the purpose of organizing a church. Accordingly, the meeting took place at the home of William Robinson abbut three miles north of the present city of Greenville. It was here that the second Cumberland church, callgd the Bear Creek Society, was organized sometime in the fall of 1819. Three families made up the original membership of six peeple. They were the Paisleys, Berrys, and Youngs. By 1820 more families had joined the congregation, and a log church was built. .Plans were made at this time to establish a presbytery here. Two years later the order came t‘11rou_ from the Cumberland Synod for the organization of the first Cn113rland Presbyterian presbytery in the state. 1. See entry 7 2. bee: McDonnold, _p, J.,.p. 92; Logan, op. cit. , p. 14; Olive Kaune, one Hundred Twenty Years of Donnellson Presbyterian Church History, 1819 1__9___39, p. 31 3. See: Logan, op. cit. , p. 23, 24 ,88,89; Kaune, op. cit., p. 3,4,13,14. Historical Sketch Although Rev. Rice returned to the south about 1828 and dropped out of the affairs of the Illinois church, the congregation he helped to establish continued to grow, exercising considerable influence on the young denomination. It Was a mother church from which stemmed many off- spring. The name of the Bear Creek Church was changed to Donnellson in 1882, and this church joined the Presbyterian Church USA in the reunion of 1907. It is an active church today. Village Church1 In the southeast Rev. McLin continued his organizing activities. Three months after the Hopewell Church had been set up he establiéhed Village Church on September 22, 1819, the third Cumberland church in Illinois. It was located about ten miles south~southeast of Enfield in White County. Its original membership consisted of four families totaling eleven people. Village Church, unlike the other two pioneer Cumberland churches, did not join the Presbyterian Church in the 1907 reunion. ‘It has carried on as a Cumberland church since its foundation. and it, too, is an active church today. Status 3: the Cumberland Denomination in 1820 At the beginning of the year 1820, ten years after the Cumberland secession, the new sect-~for it was not yet a fully established denomination—~had found a foothold in the Prairie State. It had three congregations each possessing a log house of worship. The total number of communicants amounted to about thirty people. The Church in Illinois was administered in 1880 by McGee Presbytery which had jurisdiction of the western half of the state, and by Anderson Presbytery which controlled the eastern half.2 These two presbyteries were members of the Cumberland Synod.‘ Rev. Rice of Bear Creek Church attended McGee Presbytery while Rev. McLin of the Hopewell and Village congregations was a member of the Anderson Presbytery. Growth 2: the Early Church After these beginnings the Cumberland Church gained rapidly in churches and membership. McLin established two more churches in White County and one in Gallatin County in the next two years. The churches in White County l. The data about Village Church is taken largely from material collected by the Historical Records Survey. It is barely mentioned in Logan. and not at all in McDonnold. 2. ‘§§§ Map l. p. 9. tch 1t Ff- in an of Ln 11ing 1d )0, .rches nd ounty cted “TNE.STANNC0N;1LLIN:13 DIVIDED BETWEEN NCGNE AND ANDERSON PRESBYTERIES 1819—1823 . * The home of Samuel McAdow in { Dickson County, Tennessee? Where_on : February H, 1810 the Cumberland Pres— ' byterian Church originated. (Map 1) “ 10 _ - Historical Sketch were Sharon Church, established in November 1821, Near Burnt Prairie—~ active today as Burnt Prairie Cumberland Presbyterian Church—~and Union . Ridge Church established in 1822 near Norris City. This church is likewise alive today, but it is a Presbyterian church, having joined the mother denomination in 1906. The church in Gallatin County was probably the New Salem Church, of which no records are aVailable. In these years the Cumberland Church was spreading into other parts of Illinois. A church nae established at Sugar Creek in Pope County as a result of a camp meeting held by Revs. John Barnett, Aaron Shelby and James Johnson in September 1821. This church seems to have passed out of existence, and no records of it have been found. A church was established as fa north as Menard County in 1822. This was the Rock Creek Church which was organized by Rev. John McCutchen Berry. Rev. Berry.3 like the other Cumberland ministers, had followed the path of emigration west and then north into Illinois. He had been born in Virginia and had moved to Tennessee where he had come in contact with the Cumberland Presbyterian movement. After an interval during which he served under Andrew Jackson and fought in the Battle of New Orleans,4 he moved to Indiana where he was ordained in 1822. Coming to Illinois in the same year, he made his home in what was then called the Sangamon country, a region just being opened up for settlement. Five weeks after his arrival he held a camp meeting out of which the Rock Creek congregation arose on November 22. 1822. This church met in tents and the homes of the members until 1842 when the first church building was erected. Abraham Lincoln, who came to this part of the country in 1831 and was engaged for several years in surveying the land in this neighborhood, visited the Rock Creek Church on one occasion but did not become a member. It was the son of Rev._Berry with whom Lincoln formed a partnership to run the Lincoln~Berry store at New Salem. The 300k Creek Church became a Presbyterian church in 1906 and is still alive today. Summary Before the establishment of the first presbytery in the state in 1823. there were four ordained Cumberland ministers residing in Illinois, at least eight organized congregations, and the number of church members 1. Logan, pp. 313.. p. 17. 2. See Alice Keach Bone, Rock Creek: AIRetrospect of One Hundred E 135~ a. See Logan, 239.93., p. 152 g. " 4. "It was in this battle, exposed to instant death, with med 3 lling all around him, that Mr. Berry promised God, if spared to r turn home, he would serve him to the best of his ability . . . ." Logan. 2 p. 153. ‘ 5. harry E. Pratt, Lincoln, 1809~1839, I, xxix,10,30,57; Bone, _p. 313., p. 42. “' 6. SE? Map 2, p. 11. 1 , ~11~ ketch ie—— Inion likewise bher 3110 New iron fié Rock Creek, 1822 ._Berry re n 1906 %§ Bear Creek, 1819 \ GUI-.mFRLAHD CHURCHES 1 inois, ‘ BEFORE THE ESTABLISHIENT embers 15 OF TEE FIRST 11333131112111 IN 1823 Shiloh, 1821 1; Hopewell, 1819 a? Village, 1819 -% Union Ridge, 1822 *§ NeW'Saflem, an 1835 # VS (Map 2) Sugar Creek $. r 1821 / ing «121‘ - § \ Historical Sketch .may be estimated at somewhere around one hundred. Of the eight churches organized prior to the founding of the Presbytery of Illinois, six are operating at the present time~~two as Cumberland churches, and feur as‘ Presbyterian USA churches. Two of theum “1y churches have disappeared from the records. They may be in existence today under new names or they may have become extinct. 3 Organization of Presbyteries and Synods The First Presbytery: Illinois Presbyteryl Rev. Rice of the Bear Creek Church had in 1820 petitioned the Cumberland Synod for authority to organize a new presbytery in this region. In the fall of 1822 the Synod granted this request, directing that Rev. Rice be the Moderator and that the Presbytery cf Illinois hold its first meet- ing in-the spring of 1823. By this time, however, Rice had returned to the south. A camp meeting preceded the organization of the presbytery in order to attract a large number of people to the new denomination. ‘The meeting in this wild country in the Spring of the year was a g