We are an "Historic Congregation"
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The year was 1854 when Daniel Rawls (a
Methodist circuit rider) answered the call of Mrs. Henrietta Rees. He came
to the Guadalupe Valley and held the first
Methodist church services in a "brush arbor" located on the Rees farm near
the confluence of the Guadalupe River and Turtle Creek. This was the
birth of our congregation and the beginning of Methodism in Kerrville.
Therefore, in the year 2004 we were 150 years old and the Texas Historical
Commission has designated us an "Historic Congregation".
Such designation is evidenced by a marker which has been erected in front
of the church. A picture of the marker is shown at right and the text
which is contained on the marker is quoted below. |
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Beginning in 1854, area residents were led by Methodist
circuit riders in worship services at various homes or in a brush arbor.
In 1858, the Kerrville area was included in the newly designated Rio
Grande Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Members of
Kerrville’s Methodist Congregation continued meeting in homes until 1871,
when they constructed a wood frame church in downtown Kerrville. the
building also served as a school and public meeting place but was
destroyed later in a storm. |