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Greenwood United
Methodist Church
The first
appointments to the church were traveling ministers,
such as Rev. William Stephenson, who served the
Greenwood and Caddo Circuits. Between 1839 and 1840 the
Methodists in the town met in homes and small log
buildings until their white frame church was completed
in 1840 at Magnolia Street and Bois d’Arc Lane. The
small church had no steeple and lacked a bell. 1
The first
session of the Louisiana Methodist Conference met in
Opelousas, Louisiana on January 6, 1847 and recognized
the work of the Greenwood Methodist Church. Two
preachers were appointed to the aforementioned circuits.
The church was legally incorporated on November 10,
1858. 2
In 1870
the church at what is now 7038 Magnolia Street burned to
the ground. 3From that time on meetings were
held in the old two-story school located at the north
side of the school grounds, which now belong to the
Baptist Church. 4The
church’s congregation could not afford to rebuild right
away, so they continued to meet in the school from 1870
until 1893. 5 In 1879 they raised $1,000 to
build a new church and had it completed in 1893.6
A new
white frame church with a steeple and church bell was
built on the same site as the first church, and the
interior was furnished with red carpet and dark pews.
The congregation grew and built a new church in 1916,
moving the carpet and pews into the new church in 1916.
This new church, built at Magnolia and Church Streets,
reached a height of two stories with the first floor
being used for Sunday school rooms and recreation. This
church was used until September 28, 1928 when the church
burned. The congregation moved as much of the
furnishings as they could: the pulpit, piano, and pews.7
The fourth
church was built for $12,000 in 1929 at the same
location by Shreveport architect Edward F. Neild, who
built the Caddo Parish Courthouse. 8The
church’s high ceilings have been lowered, and the
stained glass windows have been replaced as needed. It
also contains two paintings of the older churches, the
bell from the 1893 church, and a painting of Christ
in Gethsemane by H. E. Edgar of Bethany, Louisiana,
which hangs behind the choir loft.
9 Some of the auditorium windows came from the
older churches.
10
References
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