Our
Rich and Special History
History of Cartecay
History of Pastors
The Old Church
Methodists in the Cartecay area of Gilmer County began to worship under
a brush arbor before the first building was erected in August, 1834. Built
on the property of Lewis Ellington about a mile and a half down Roy Road
from present-day Georgia Highway 52, the first building of Cartecay Methodist
Church, South was most likely a log structure which later burned. The
property was deeded to the church July 20, 1844, but reverted to the heirs
when the church site was moved.
The cemetery was nearby on the property
of S.M. Simmons. His descendant, W.A. Simmons, deeded the cemetery to
the church in 1940. The earliest dated tombstone in the cemetery bears
the name of Wikle and is dated 1834. Older native stones are unmarked.
The first pastor of the congregation
and the first Methodist preacher in Gilmer County was the Rev. William
Ellington who was ordained by Bishop Francis Asbury on September 16, 1805,
before Mr. Ellington came to Georgia. The ordination papers are on file
in the Wesleyan Collection at Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas.
The first Sunday School at Cartecay
Methodist Church, South was organized April 20, 1851, with the Constitution
for a Sabbath School drawn up on October 9, 1853. The officers and teachers
of the Sabbath School were Lewis Duvall Ellington, William Adolphus Simmons,
Sr., Daniel E. Slagle, Barnett Wilson, H.R. Wilson, Joseph McClure, Mrs.
Jane E. Tabor and Mrs. Mary E. Simmons. The Sunday School has met continuously
since its constitution and celebrates its anniversary the first Sunday
of each October.
In 1859 Barnett Wilson gave two acres
of land for a new building and cemetery. The deed was signed October 25,
1859. The second building of the Cartecay Methodist Church, South was
erected that year out of virgin pine timber, hand hewn and planed. The
pews, altar and pulpit were fashioned from solid pieces of wide pine planks,
one and one-half inches thick, fastened together by dove tailing and mortised
with wooden pegs. The floor, ceiling and walls were also constructed from
hand-hewn wide planks. Frank B. Haigler, a church member, later refinished
all the wood used in the sanctuary in a buff color accenting the wood
grain with a soft finish.
As was the custom of the day, the
church was built with two entrance doors, one on the left for women and
the other for men. The pews were divided by a wooden partition, so that
men and women did not mingle during the services. Pews set along the back
wall were used by slaves, some of whom are buried in marked graves in
the cemetery beside the church building.
The congregation was divided by the
issues that divided the nation during the War Between the States. Often
during that period, the men of Cartecay Methodist Church, South brought
their shotguns and spent the nights in the church building to protect
it from their enemies who had deserted their church for the Northern Branch.
Sunday School rooms were added to
the rear of the sanctuary in 1948 and again in the mid fifties. Gas heaters
replaced the wood burning stoves in the early 1950's. Electric lights
replaced oil or gas lanterns in the 1940's.
Although no longer in use as a church,
the white wood frame building still stands at the corner of Roy Road and
Highway 52 East and in 2001 received it's designation on the National
Registry of Historic Buildings.
The present brick building at the
top of the hill and across the cemetery from the old building was erected
in 1974 on land donated by Ernest T. Hudson, Raymond Hudson, and Winifred
Hudson. It was dedicated on February 23, 1975 by Bishop William R. Cannon.
The Rev. Dr. Oscar Poole was the pastor. The Fellowship Hall was added
in 1975-76 and was dedicated in December, 1976.
Present members added a Fellowship
Hall and two additional Sunday School rooms in June of 1996.
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