
Harrison County, MO
Churches
Eagleville Methodist
Church
In 1859 a lot was procured in the southwest part of town and a
frame house of worship was erected there. Because of the Civil War
the church was not completed until the cold winter of 1863-1864. Services
were held before there was a floor and benches were used as seats. The
first church building had one room with a belfry, a porch and two doors on the
east. The porch was built on pillars which was convenient for a wagon
or buggy to drive up to it and let the family step directly on to it.
There was a partition about three feet high built through the
church. The women entered the door on the north and sat on the north
side of the partition while the men entered through the south door and occupied
the south side. The mothers usually kept the infants and smaller children
with them but as soon as the little boys were old enough to behave they were
privleged to sit with the men.
Deeds on file show the date of 1874 so it
is assumed the owners were allowed to build a chuch on the lot and later given
permanent possession of it for the sum of $50.00. The west side of
the land was deeded to the trustees in 1869 by Joel and Martha Hall, and James
B. and Elizabeth Brower. The parsonage was built on this land.
From
Mr. Walter Wyant's story of the church it was interesting to note before there
was any stock law the high porch pillars were a place where pigs liked to
scratch and often church services would have tos stop until the disturbance was
cleared away.
Joseph Hunsicker made the first seats of native walnut
lumber. He had to kiln dry it before he could plane it to make
seats. His son, James, a teen age boy used to sit up all night to
watch the fire in the kiln.
The first funeral held in the church was
that of Arthur Herider, who was a member of the church and a soldier in the
Civil War. He was mustered out of the service and started home but became
ill and died December 10, 1863 in St. Louis, Mo. A message was sent
his wife that he was ill and she left for the city to be with him but found upon
arrival he had died and the body had been sent back to Eagleville. The
body was placed in the uncompleted building and preserved easily because of the
bitter cold weather of that winter and remained there until his wife could
return.
excerpt transcribed by: Melody Beery
Source:
Eagleville Memories 1851-1969
by: Elsie Herron
The Eagleville Christian Church
The Baptist Church
The Baptist Church was orgainzed by Elder John Woodward of
Cainesville, April 23, 1864 with 13 members. For ten years they worshipped
in the M.E. church. In the fall of 1874 they built a beautiful frmae house
of worship at a cost $1,500.00. Pastors of the church were: John
Woodwar (6 years), J.H. Burrows (4 years), John Woodward (2 years again), M.N.
Allen (a short time) and V.M. Harper (2 years).
excerpt from Eagleville
Memories 1851-1969 by Elsie Herron,
transcribed by: Melody Beery
BACK to Harrison County, Missouri
Genealogy Trails
©2008 Genealogy Trails