Search Results

1. M. E. Church

Located on the corner of 3rd Avenue and Ballengee Street, a group of church members pose in front of the building and on the steps. The reverend at the time the picture was taken was Rev. Gates. Subjects unidentified.

2. First Methodist Episcopal Church, Hinton, W. Va.

The two churches of different denominations stand next to each other on a hill above a covered bridge. West Warren Baptist is on the left, Wadestown Methodist is in the middle, and in the lower right of the image is the covered bridge.

3. West Warren Baptist Church and Wadestown Methodist Church, Battelle District, Monongalia County, W. Va.

A crowd exits the church, pictured on the left. Cars are parked beside the post office building on the right.

4. Methodist Church and Post Office, Forest Hill, W. Va.

Looking at the church from the dirt parking lot across the road.

5. Madams Creek Methodist Church near Hinton, W. Va.

The church building was erected in the early 1900's after years of holding services in a school house. The organization was likely established in the 1850's.

6. Circleville Methodist Church, Circleville, Pendleton County, W. Va.

The Oakland Methodist church is probably the oldest continuous rural congregation in Morgan County. It was officially established in 1824.

7. Oakland Methodist Church, Timber Ridge District, Morgan County, W. Va.

The church is located in or near Arnettsville.  The church was first built as a log meeting house and a Methodist Episcopal preacher ministered at the second church built in 1846.  The M.E. South Church was organized at Sniders Temple in 1867.  After the Civil War the Snider family gave land to the Northern Methodists for the church in Arnettsville. In 1902 the new church was dedicated.

8. Sniders Temple Church, Grant District, Monongalia County, W. Va.

The southern Methodist church was organized in 1858.

9. Beech Hill Methodist Church, Beech Hill, Mason County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1845. The current building was built in 1860-66.  The church is "situated along the Little Kanawha River, ten miles west Glenville, on State Route 5.  Gilmer County - Dekalb District."

10. Job's Temple Methodist Episcopal Church, Dekalb District, Gilmer County, W. Va.

New Bethel Methodist Church was organized between 1784 and 1786.  The church burned in 1942.  The church then met in the community hall until August 1948. Money was raised and the present stone church was dedicated in 1948.

11. New Bethel Methodist Church, Good Hope, Harrison County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1847. It is located 2 miles from Big Wheeling Creek at Sand Hill.

12. Sand Hill Methodist Episcopal Church, Marshall County, W. Va.

The church was established in 1835.

13. Methodist Church, Buffalo, Putnam County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1857.

14. Wood Hill Methodist Church, Marshall County, W. Va.

The church was established in 1849 in the industrial part of town once known as Ritchietown. There were no paved streets or walks and kerosene lamps were used for lighting. The church was 14 years old when West Virginia became a state.

15. Wesley Methodist Church, Wheeling, Ohio County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1856.  In 1885 the Ohio River Railroad was built in front of the church causing so much noise that the congregation had the building moved by the railroad company to its present location.

16. Mason Methodist Church, Mason City, Mason County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1800.

17. Oak Grove Methodist Church, Fork Ridge, Marshall County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1800.

18. Oak Grove Methodist Church, Fork Ridge, Marshall County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1800.

19. Oak Grove Methodist Church, Fork Ridge, Marshall County, W. Va.

20. Gerrardstown Methodist Church, Berkeley County, W. Va.

Mt. Pisgah was founded in 1817.The current building was built in 1891.

21. Mt. Pisgah Methodist Episcopal Church, Dekalb District, Gilmer County, W. Va.

The church was established in 1835.

22. Methodist Church, Buffalo, Putnam County, W. Va.

The church was organized prior to West Virginia becoming a state in 1821 in what was then known as Williamsport, Virginia.

23. Pruntytown Methodist Church, Pruntytown, Taylor County, W. Va.

The chapel was built in what was then Williamsport, Virginia, twenty years before West Virginia became a state. The building served as a Methodist Protestant church until the Union of Methodist Churches in 1939. In 1947, the church and its grounds were sold to the Industrial School and was designated the school's institutional chapel.

24. Warder Chapel at the West Virginia Industrial School for Boys, Pruntytown, Taylor County, W. Va.

The church was founded in 1829

25. Half Run Methodist, United Presbyterian Church, Marshall County, W. Va.

26. Methodist Episcopal Church, Davis, W. Va.

Hedding Chapel Methodist Church was organized in 1856. The present building was dedicated in August 1893.On the back of the image, a caption reads: "This picture was taken in about 1912 -- 15  years before route 19 was graded through church [lot].  To Ruth Alkire Smith, from your Sunday School Teacher, Helen Sprigg. Christmas, 1956."

27. Hedding Chapel Methodist Church, Walkersville, Lewis County, W. Va.

The 'New Church' was built after members of the methodist church using the old stone church were unable to find a deed for the old stone church and when they decided to build a new building. The New Methodist Church was dedicated in 1919.

28. New Methodist Church, Kabletown, Jefferson County, W. Va.

View of the church building from across the street, looking at the intricate stained-glass window work.

29. Methodist Church, Hinton, W. Va.

A group of spectators watch as Parker re-enacts the circuit rider next to the First Methodist Church building located on the corner of Ballengee Street and Third Avenue.

30. Moorman Parker Re-enacting Methodist Preacher Circuit Rider, Hinton, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1817 and rebuilt in 1953

31. Berry Fork Chapel Methodist Church, Braxton County, W. Va.

Looking at the building entrance from the parking lot.

32. Sand Knob Methodist Church, Summers County, W. Va.

The church was founded in 1855.

33. Barrackville Methodist Church, Marion County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1823.

34. St. John's Methodist Church, Basnettville, Marion County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1848.

35. Diamond Street Methodist Church, Fairmont, Marion County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1829.

36. The Methodist Temple, Fairmont, Marion County, W. Va.

The church was organized 1844.

37. Hopewell Methodist Church, Fairmont, Marion, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1831.

38. Salem Montana Methodist Church, Marion County, W. Va.

The church is located near Weston on Smith's Run. It was organized in 1832. The present building was built in 1852.

39. Smith's Run Methodist Church, Lewis County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1834.

40. Mt. Gilead Methodist Church, Georgetown, Lewis County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1856.

41. Beale Chapel Methodist Church, Apple Grove, Mason County, W. Va.

The church is located south of Bula, W. Va.  It was organized in 1847 and the building was built in 1870.  The present church was erected in 1893.

42. Miracle Run Methodist Church, Battelle District, Monongalia County, W. Va.

The church was founded and built in 1858. There is no record of a Methodist church in Elizabeth, W. Va. before 1858.

43. Elizabeth Methodist Church, Elizabeth, Wirt County, W. Va.

The congregation which later became the present Methodist church first met at the Hinkle Church in 1856.  The present church was built in 1891.

44. Marstiller-Orlena Methodist Church, Gilman, Randolph County, W. Va.

The congregation existed as early as 1787.

45. Pitcher Methodist Church, Dakota, Marion County, W. Va.

The church in Ona, W. Va. was organized in 1814

46. Bethesda Methodist Church, Cabell County, W. Va.

The church was organized around 1775

47. Petersburg Methodist Church, Petersburg, Grant County, W. va.

The church, originally Waugh Chapel, was organized in the early 1800s, though the current building was built in 1869.

48. St. Paul United Methodist Church, Grant County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1851.

49. Wayman's Ridge Methodist Church, Marshall County, W. Va.

Colored drawing depicting the church building and grounds. Published by Beckley News Co. of Beckley, W. Va.

50. First Methodist Episcopal Church, Hinton, W. Va.

Writing on back of photo reads, "First church in Forest Hill district was Forest Hill Methodist Church. Erected on this site was a one room log structure used until 1860. This picture presents Forest Hill Methodist Church but on the same site as log church."

51. Forest Hill Methodist Church, Summers County, W. Va.

St. Mark's was organized in 1844, but was previously known as First M.E. Church.

52. St. Mark's Methodist Church, Hedgesville, Berkeley County, W. Va.

The church was originally built and dedicated in 1782 in honor of Henry Payne, Sr. and his wife.  The current chapel was built in 1902.

53. Payne's Chapel Methodist Church, Berkeley County, W. Va.

The Methodist Church in Rocky Marsh was organized in 1844. The current building was dedicated in 1938.

54. Marvin Chapel Methodist Church, Berkeley County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1831

55. Castleman's Run Methodist Church, Brooke County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1785 and is the oldest church in the Northern Panhandle of West Virginia.

56. Kadesh Chapel Methodist Church, Wellsburg, Brooke County, W. Va.

The church was founded in 1834 and the first building was a log cabin.  A second church was built in 1854, but was destroyed by a storm in 1902.  The present church building was dedicated in 1904.

57. Franklin Methodist Church, Brooke County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1824. The building was dedicated in 1884.

58. First Methodist Church of Barboursville, Cabell County, W. Va.

The Church of the Brethren Greenland Congregation was organized in 1849.

59. Greenland Congregation, Maysville, Grant County, W. Va.

The original church was organized in 1860 and the present church was built in 1881.

60. Oak Grove Methodist Church, Hardy County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1815.

61. Old Fields Methodist Church, Hardy County, W. Va.

New Bethel Methodist Church was organized between 1784 and 1786.  The church burned in 1942.  The church then met in the community hall until August 1948. Money was raised and the present stone church was eventually built.

62. New Bethel Methodist Church, Good Hope, Harrison County, W. Va.

The Methodist church became a part of the Jefferson Circuit in 1861. The 'Old Stone Church' was built in 1850. The stone church was used by all Protestant denominations. It is now unused and in ruins.

63. Old Stone Church, Methodist Church, Kabletown, Jefferson County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1849.  The church lasted through the Civil War and remains in use.

64. Bolivar Methodist Church, Bolivar, Jefferson County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1856.

65. Logansport M. E. Church, Logansport, Marion County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1843.

66. Monumental Methodist Church, Marion County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1830.

67. Berlin Methodist Church, Berlin, Lewis County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1838.  The present church building was built in 1869.

68. Laurel Lick Methodist Church, Berlin, Lewis County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1850 and gets it's name from an early settler.  The current building was built in 1886 and remodeled in 1902.

69. McCanns Run Methodist Church, Lewis County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1850.

70. Duffy Methodist Church, Duffy, Lewis County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1856.  The church was torn down and moved in 1892.

71. Horner Methodist Church, Horner, Lewis County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1858.

72. Vandalia Methodist Church, Vandalia, Lewis County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1844.

73. Shepherds Methodist Church, Adaline, Marshall County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1836.  The current church was dedicated in 1887.

74. Clouston Methodist Church, Cameron District, Marshall County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1808.

75. Pleasant Hill Methodist Church, Sherrard, Marshall County, W. Va.

The church was organized in 1853.  A new building was dedicated in 1914.

76. Salem Methodist Church, Dallas, Marshall County, W. Va.

A group of church goers are gathered outside of the church, which was established in the Rock Gap District in 1797. The chapel had a greater influence on rural religion and in the spread of the German Evangelical movement than any other in Morgan County, W. Va. For years, the German preachers of the United Brethren shared the chapel with English Methodist preachers, often conducting services in both the English and German languages.

77. Ambrose Chapel, Rock Gap District, Morgan County, W. Va.

The organization was established in 1852 and was originally called Friendship Methodist Church. The building is located just off of Route 9 at Ridersville.

78. Wesley Chapel Methodist Church, Berkeley Springs, Morgan County, W. Va.

A group of church goers are gathered outside of the church, which was established in the Rock Gap District in 1797. The chapel had a greater influence on rural religion and in the spread of the German Evangelical movement than any other in Morgan County, W. Va. For years, the German preachers of the United Brethren shared the chapel with English Methodist preachers, often conducting services in both the English and German languages.

79. Ambrose Chapel, Rock Gap District, Morgan County, W. Va.

The organization was established in 1786 and is the oldest continuous congregation in Morgan County.

80. Berkeley Springs Methodist Church, Berkeley Springs, Morgan County, W. Va.

The organization was established before the Civil War, but the exact date is unknown.

81. Paw Paw Methodist Church, Paw Paw, Morgan County, W. Va.

The church was established in 1831.

82. Black's Chapel Methodist Church near Allingdale, Nicholas County, W. Va.

Liberty was officially established in 1820.

83. Liberty Methodist Church, Carl, Nicholas County, W. Va.

The church was established in 1842.

84. Gilboa Methodist Church, Gilboa, Nicholas County, W. Va.

The church was established in 1822.

85. Penile Methodist Church, Hominy Falls, Nicholas County, W. Va.

The church is located in Hookersville Rural Station and was established in 1825.

86. Muddlety Methodist Church near Summersville, Nicholas County, W. Va.

The church was established before 1847 when a small group of Christians decided to build a church in what is now the Mt. Nebo community. Grave markers for Civil War veterans can still be found in the church's graveyard today. The exact date of the church's establishment is unknown.

87. Gilgal Methodist Church near Mt. Nebo, Nicholas County, W. Va.

The church was established some time between 1803 and 1810. During the Civil War, church members were openly divided as "northern" members would hold service inside the church while "southern" members would stand outside or vice-versa.

88. Bethel Methodist Church, Poe, Nicholas County, W. Va.

The church was established in 1820 and officially unified all branches of the denomination within the Summersville area in 1939.

89. Memorial Methodist Church, Summersville, Nicholas County, W. Va.

The church was founded in 1893. The church has had a few different names and locations. In 1894 it moved to a large frame building and acquired it's name of Fairview.

90. Fairview Methodist Church, Spillman Mt., Webster County W. Va.

The first Methodist society organized in Webster County in 1833 at the Hamrick Barn by Reverend Addison Hite. The first methodist church built in the county was at Pleasant Grove in the early 1840's.

91. Hamrick Barn, Webster County, W. Va.

The church was built around 1821 about two miles north of Ft. Seybert. It was the first ever Methodist church in Pendleton County.

92. Bethel Methodist Church near Fort Seybert, Pendleton County, W. Va.

The church was built around 1821 about two miles north of Ft. Seybert. It was the first ever Methodist church in Pendleton County.

93. Bethel Methodist Church near Fort Seybert, Pendleton County, W. Va.

The church was established in 1845 and sits about five miles below Winfield, W. Va. at Fraziers Bottom. The church was originally built for community use, allowing services in all orthodox denominations including Baptist, Episcopal, Methodist, and Presbyterian. In 1870, it became officially Methodist, but still allowed other denominations to use it.

94. Fraziers Bottom Church, Putnam County, W. Va.

The church began with services held in homes and other buildings in 1784. Later a log building was built.  A frame church was built in 1867 and the present church building was built in 1890.

95. Beverly Methodist Episcopal Church, Beverly, Randolph County, W. Va.

The church was first established in 1851.  The Methodist Protestants and the Methodists Episcopals shared the early church until 1856. A church was built in the present church's location in 1893.  The present church building was built in 1906.

96. First Methodist Church, Elkins, Randolph, County, W. Va.