|


EARLY CHURCHES of RINGGOLD COUNTY
As soon as the pioneers arrived in Ringgold County, their thoughts turned toward establishing schools and churches. Worship
services were held whenever the circuit riders came through. In some communities Sunday Schools and churches were organized even
though finanical resources were quite limited. Reverend W. C. WILLIAMS of Lorimor preached a sermom in the
timber of Jefferson Township in 1853. In October of 1854, Reverend Mr. BELL, also known as "Iron Jacket Baptist,"
rode up from Fairview (Denver), Missouri to conduct services out of Henry MILLER's home. The following year, Mr. and
Mrs. Luke SHAY returned home to find a Catholic priest waiting for them at the cabin. He later said the first mass
in Ringgold County in the SHAY cabin. Barton DUNNING, who kept the first store in Mount Ayr, started a Sunday school in
1856 and presented the organization with a Sunday School library which he had purchased one of his business trips to St. Louis, Missouri. Mr. SCHROBER, a Methodist preacher, became
the superintendent of this Sunday School and preached the first sermon in the fledgling county seat of Mount Ayr. Few groups, however, could not afford
to erect even humble church buildings. Instead, members of the congregation met in school houses or their homes. The Irish Catholics of Maloy held services in Luke SHAY's parlor until they built a chapel 1/4 of a mile north of town in
1875. Luke SHAY donated half of the construction cost. The citizens of Liberty Township decided to erect a church on a tract of land donated by James A. DRAKE's heirs in 1874.
With little financial resources and building materials scarce, the people garthered large boulders for the foundation and donated timber for the foundation sills. The Widow CALFEE
donated an oak tree that was made into a 40-foot sill. Those who could not donate either materials or money, volunteered to haul logs to the sawmill, lime from a kiln in Decatur
County, or shingles and lumber from Leon. Others helped put up the building. When the church was finally completed, it was done so debt free. Elder TODD dedicated the church,
named High Point Methodist Church. S. L. THOMPSON noted in the April 21, 1914 edition of The Mount Ayr Record-News, "Those of us who were boys when the church was being built
are now men with silver hair. . . High Point Church has now become one of the old landmarks of the early settlement of Ringgold County....standing as a monument to the memory of
the loyal, hardy settlers of the surrounding country."
The Palestine United Brethren Church was erected three miles south of Delphos. With more and more people purchasing automobiles,
the membership dwindled until the church closed its doors in 1918 when the remaining congregation transferred their membership to the Redding church.
Many of the country churches relied upon the services of circuit riders, clergymen who followed prairie trails from one congregation to another. The circuit riders lived on their horses furnished by the members of their
circuit, going from home to home, community to community. Some riders reportedly wore out eight horses a year. Nearly penniless, they were "happy in God" as they attended to members of their
flock scattered over the rolling hills of the prairie.
Camp meetings and tent revivals thrived in the southern part of Ringgold County from the 1870's until around 1910. The excitement and fervor of these revivals were a welcomed break from the daily routine of life on the
farm and drew in large crowds. The strongest evangelist sermons drew the largest crowds. An annual camp meeting was held from 1872 to 1875 on the Isaac MARSHALL farm in Middle Fork Township. Later, these meeting were
held on the Luther DENNIS farm, also in Middle Fork Township. Mrs. Anna DAVIS, an evangelist of the Evangelical Church, conducted tent meeting in August on a 40-tract of land John BUSH purchased specifically for religious
purposes, then grazing the rest of the year. Old-timers declared that they could hear the amassed singing hymns from two miles away. Before most of the outlaying villages and towns existed, five churches had been erected
in Mount Ayr. The first, the Methodist Church was constructed in 1869 and followed by the United Presbyterian Church in 1870. The Baptist Church was erected in 1873; the Presbyterian Church in 1875, and the Christian Church
in 1882. In 1890, there was a new Methodist Church erected in Benton and the Bohemian colony near Diagonal replaced
their church situated on the DOLECHECK farm with a new church building. The Goshen church was moved to Diagonal in 1891. By 1895, there were 25 churches in Ringgold County with some of the smaller rural churches already closed with their membership transferred to other larger congregations. The congregation at Kellerton held
services in a schoolhouse. A Christian Church in Tingley was erected in 1882, the first in a group of towns platted out along sites by the railroad. In 1882, a Baptist Church was erected in Delphos; a Catholic Church in Kellerton;
a United Brethren Church in Beaconsfield; and an Evangelistic Church at Wirt (later Ellston.) By 1895, two or three churches had been established in each of Ringgold County's villages. Reverend William BROWN, pastor of the United
Presbyterian Church of Mount Ayr, established a mission church at Eugene. The evangalistic spirit swept through the county with four young women stepping forward to dedicate their lives to missionary services abroad: Josephine STAHL
went to Darjeeling, India; Helen GALLOWAY went to Chung King, China; Lydia WILKINSON went to Foo Chow, China; and Fannie PERKINS went to Rangoon, Burma.
Sources:
Ringgold County HistoryComplied and written by the Iowa Writers' Program of the Work Projects Administration in the State of Iowa, Sponsored
by Ringgold County Superintendent of Schools, Mount Ayr, Iowa. 1942.
Written & Submitted by Sharon R. Becker, 2008
HOME

|