Bethesda Presbyterian Church (Houstonville, North Carolina) Explained

Bethesda Presbyterian Church, Session House and Cemetery
Nrhp Type:nrhp
Location:SR 2359
Coordinates:35.7208°N -80.8053°W
Architecture:vernacular Greek Revival
Added:December 8, 1980
Refnum:80002855

Bethesda Presbyterian Church, Session House and Cemetery is a historic Presbyterian church, session house, and cemetery located in Chambersburg Township, Iredell County, North Carolina. It was built in 1853, and is a one-story, three bay by five bay, rectangular vernacular Greek Revival style frame church. It has a pedimented, temple form, front gable roof and an unusual front recessed balcony. It is the oldest church building in Iredell County. Also on the property is the contributing session house, also built in 1853, and church cemetery with about 200 gravestones.[1]

It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

History

The Bethesda Presbyterian Church was organized on August 23, 1847 near Amity Hill in Iredell County. The original fourteen members of the church had come from the Third Creek, Back Creek, Thyatira, and Fourth Creek Presbyterian churches in Iredell and Rowan Counties. The first pastor in 1848 was the Rev. Thomas E. Davis. Until the first building was built, the congregation met in brush arbors and a nearby school house. The membership was 85 in 1855, including 46 white, 36 slave, and three free black members. Initially, slaves and black members sat in the balcony of the church. The church was still in use in 2022.

Northeast of the church building is the cemetery existing in an open field with no fencing. The cemetery contains roughly 200 gravestones from the 19th-century.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Laura A. W. Phillips. Bethesda Presbyterian Church, Session House and Cemetery . National Register of Historic Places – Nomination and Inventory . February 1980 . pdf . North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office . 2015-01-01.