First Presbyterian Church (Murfreesboro, Tennessee) Explained

First Presbyterian Church
Location:210 N. Spring St., Murfreesboro, Tennessee
Coordinates:35.8471°N -86.3898°W
Built:1914
Builder:Maugans & Bell
Architect:D. Anderson Dickey
Architecture:Classical Revival
Added:June 24, 1993
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:93000561

Murfree Springs Presbyterian Church was founded in 1812 in a log cabin. In1818 it changed its name to First Presbyterian Church and in 1820 moved to a brick meeting house on East Vine Street. First Presbyterian Church currently is a historic church at 210 N. Spring Street in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

Murfreesboro was the capital of Tennessee from 1818 to 1826. In 1822, theRutherford County courthouse, where the legislature met, burned. The legislature thenmet at the First Presbyterian Church, the largest building in town, with the Housemeeting in the lower floor and the Senate in the expanded gallery. Present during those legislative sessions where Andrew Jackson, Sam Houston, James K. Polk and Davy Crockett. Andrew Jackson was nominated by the state legislature to be President of the United States in 1925.

The Union occupation of Murfreesboro during the Civil War saw the churchbuilding used as a hospital, for storage, billeting and as a stable. In 1864, the Unionforces tore down the church to use the bricks at Fortress Rosecrans.

The scars of the war experience caused the church to relocate three blocks awayto its present location at College and Spring Streets. A German gothic-style structure waserected in 1867. A tornado tore through downtown Murfreesboro in April, 1913, doingconsiderable damage to the Sanctuary, thus a new building, this time in the classicrevival style with a dome, was built on the old foundation in 1914.[1] The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places with a recorded completion date of 1914, corresponding to the post-tornado reconstruction. The new building was designed by Nashville architect D. Anderson Dickey[2] and built by local contractors Maugans & Bell. A new education building was added in 1955, and a third section with a large “common room” with classrooms were finished in 1997.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Our History . First Presbyterian Church, Murfreesboro.
  2. "Building News," Manufacturers Record 63, no. 24 (June 19, 1913): 72.