Kehukee Primitive Baptist Church Explained

Kehukee Primitive Baptist Church
Coordinates:36.1058°N -77.415°W
Built:1872, 1901
Architecture:Gothic Revival, Front-gable church style
Added:February 4, 1994
Refnum:94000023

Kehukee Primitive Baptist Church is a historic Primitive Baptist church building in Halifax County, North Carolina located about a mile (1.5 km) south of Scotland Neck off NC Route 125.[1] It was built in 1872 and is a simple gable-front frame structure subsequently sheathed in weatherboard.[2] A Gothic Revival style frame tower was added in 1901.[2] Also on the property is a church cemetery established in 1889.[3]

The Kehukee congregation's previous meeting house, at a different site, was the location in 1769 for the foundation of the Kehukee Baptist Association of churches from North Carolina and southern Virginia,[4] and in 1827 of the Primitive Baptist Kehukee Declaration issued by the association. The 1872 site, including the cemetery, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

Kehukee congregation

The original Kehukee (formerly also Quehuky[5]) meeting house was built about 1742 by William Surginer or Sojourner (1706–1750), a General Baptist from Burley, Isle of Wight County, Virginia who acquired land in the basin of the Kehukee Swamp, a creek which flows into the Roanoke River,[6] [7] and settled there in the mid-1720s.[8] The church stood near the creek and two miles east of Scotland Neck,[9] on land donated by Surginer, its first minister.[8] About 1755 the congregation adopted practices based on those of the Philadelphia Baptist Association after a visit by two of the latter's elders, Benjamin Miller and William Van Horne (father of Thomas Van Horne).[6] [10] As the earliest Baptist church in the region, Kehukee was direct or indirect mother church of many others.[11] It was the founding site of the Kehukee Association in 1769, but not the leading church within that association.

As a subsidiary branch of the Kehukee congregation, a "new meeting house" was established on Fishing Creek (not to be confused with Lower Fishing Creek church, founded by Charles Daniel[12]). It was sometimes called "Cotten's meeting house", and later "Lawrence's meeting house" after elder Joshua Lawrence.[13] By 1803 "deaths, excommunications, and removals" had reduced the membership of the "old meeting house" at Kehukee to much less than that at Fishing Creek,[14] In 1806 the association recognised Lawrence's Meeting House as a separate member church.[15]

The Kehukee church had no minister from 1830 to 1860, when elder John W. Stamper took over.[9] In 1871–72 the current church was built a mile south of Scotland Neck.[9] The old church was torn down soon after,[9] Local historian Charlie Dunn Alston believes the old site was donated for a church for freedmen, and now holds the Kehukee Baptist Church, a Black church on Sherman Drive off NC Route 903 (36.1189°N -77.3735°W).[16]

The addition of the steeple to Kehukee Primitive Baptist Church in 1901 is ascribed to John Coughenour, a sawmill owner who lived within sight of the church and preferred the steepled designs of his native Pennsylvania.[17] Church membership declined from 62 in 1905 to 40 in 1919, and steadily thereafter. The last member, Lena Andrews Shackell, died in 1979 aged 102,[17] and the last regular church meeting was held in 1981. The property reverted to the Kehukee Association, which still occasionally used the building for meetings. Later it was sold to a local resident who had already been volunteering in its upkeep.[17]

Ministers of Kehukee Church
William Surginer c. 1742–1750
Thomas Pope 1751–1763
John Meglamre c. 1766–1772 [18]
William Burges 1772– [19]
Silas Mercer (father of Jesse Mercer) c. 1776–1781 [20]
Joshua White –c. 1790 [21]
Lemuel Burkitt –1807
1807–1830 [22]
none 1830–1860
John W. Stamper 1860–1876 [23]
1876–1879
Andrew J. Moore 1879–1919

Kehukee Association

The Kehukee Association was formed at the Kehukee church, probably in 1769,[4] by several Baptist churches (most named after nearby watercourses[24]) in Halifax, Edgecombe, Warren, Bertie, and Camden counties.[25] [26] Dozens more churches from surrounding areas joined in subsequent decades. Some of these later endorsed Free Will Baptism and left the association.[27] Provincial North Carolina's Regulator Insurrection (1768–1771) devastated the western base of Shubal Stearns' Sandy Creek Association, whose few churches in the province's east asked to join Kehukee instead.[28] Some of the old Kehukee Regulars accepted affiliation of Separatists without requiring re-baptism, precipitating a split in 1775 between these "United Baptists" and the hardline Regulars.[29] The split ended in 1786, when the reunited group was named the United Baptist Association.[30] In 1777, ten churches of the Regular Baptist faction made a confession of faith which was implicitly endorsed after the reunification.[31] [32]

Sometimes the Virginia and North Carolina member churches respectively met separately from the full conference of all churches,[33] and in 1790 the two states permanently split amicably, the Carolina group regaining the name Kehukee Association while the Virginia one took the name Virginia Portsmouth Association.[34] In 1793, the Neuse Baptist Association, comprising the churches south of the Tar River, was split off for similar reasons of convenience.[35] In 1803, there were 31 member churches in the Kehukee Association, most being members of one of its four regional "Union Meetings", namely east of Chowan River, Bertie, Flat Swamp, and Swift Creek,[36] the last including Kehukee church itself. In 1806 there was a third split, the churches on the right bank of the Roanoke seceding as the Chowan Association.[37]

In the early 19th century, Joshua Lawrence of the Kehukee Association was a leader of the Primitive Baptist movement, which opposed the General Baptist involvement in mission boards, tract societies, and temperance societies.[38] In August 1826 Lawrence prepared a "Declaration of the Reformed Baptist Churches in North Carolina", which was published in succeeding months and debated by Kehukee and its sibling associations.[39] [40] Kehukee's 1826 conference voted to send it to the member churches for consideration,[39] [41] and its 1827 conference issued what became known as the Kehukee Declaration:[42] [43] [44] Despite scattered earlier smaller-scale incidents, the Kehukee Declaration is considered by many historians to mark the birth of Primitive Baptism.[45] Alexander Campbell endorsed the declaration despite later evincing support for missions.[46]

At its 1861 conference the Kehukee Association ordered a day of fasting and prayer to mark the Civil War.[47] A similar resolution in 1862 was not carried out due to the disruption of Union Army occupation.[48] The association's 1886 history claimed that Primitive Baptists were the only Protestant denomination with no ill will between its Southern and Northern members — the former having joined the Confederate Army while the latter stayed out of the Union Army.[49] The association grew from 37 congregations in 1860 with 1,494 members, to a peak of 41 with 2,067 in 1879.[50] It fell to 38 with 1,258 in 1919 and 26 with 1,135 in 1926.[50] [51] Membership declined steadily over the 20th century.[52]

Sources

. Baptist Theology: A Four-Century Study . James Leo Garrett Jr. . 2009 . Mercer University Press. 978-0-88146-129-9 . 2011-01-08.

Notes and References

  1. York 1993 § 2
  2. York 1993 § 7 p. 1
  3. York 1993 § 7 p. 3
  4. Encyclopedia: Powell . William S. . Moore . Anne . SLNC Government and Heritage Library . Dictionary of North Carolina Biography . 2006 . Univ of North Carolina Press . . June 2023 . https://www.ncpedia.org/kehukee-baptist-association . en . Kehukee Baptist Association .
  5. Edwards and Paschal 1984 p. 105 n. 3
  6. Edwards and Paschal 1984 p. 82
  7. Book: Powell . William S. . Hill . Michael . The North Carolina Gazetteer: A Dictionary of Tar Heel Places and Their History . 15 June 2010 . University of North Carolina Press . 978-0-8078-9829-1 . 2nd . en . 280.
  8. Encyclopedia: Powell . William S. . Stevenson . George . Dictionary of North Carolina Biography . 1994 . Univ of North Carolina Press . . 6 . https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/surginer-william . en . Surginer, William .
  9. York 1993 § 8 p. 12
  10. Edwards and Paschal 1984 pp. 79–80
  11. Edwards and Paschal 1984 pp. 84–85
  12. Early History of the Baptists in North Carolina - No. 5: Lower Fishing Creek & The River Falls Baptist Church . Biblical Recorder . 1889 . baptisthistoryhomepage .
  13. Biggs Burkitt and Read 1834 p. 283
  14. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 pp. 244–246
  15. Biggs Burkitt and Read 1834 pp.170 283
  16. Stalls 2021 p. 17
  17. Stalls 2021 p. 18
  18. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 pp. 138, 279
  19. Encyclopedia: Powell . William S. . Johnston . Hugh Buckner . Dease . Jared . Dictionary of North Carolina Biography . 1996 . January 2023 . Univ of North Carolina Press . . https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/thomas-john . en . Thomas, John .
  20. Book: Weis . Frederick Lewis . The Colonial Clergy of Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina . 1976 . Genealogical Publishing Com . 978-0-8063-0731-2 . 66 . en.
  21. Book: Grime . J. H. (John Harvey) . History of Middle Tennessee Baptists . 1902 . Baptist and Reflector . Nashville, Tenn . 6 .
  22. Biggs Burkitt and Read 1834 pp. 281–283
  23. York 1993 § 8 p. 13
  24. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 p. 183
  25. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 p. 31
  26. Edwards and Paschal 1984 p. 80
  27. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 pp. 46–47
  28. Sparks 2005 p. 176
  29. Sparks 2005 p. 189
  30. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 pp. 41–46, 98, 102
  31. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 p. 49
  32. Garrett 2009 pp. 127–128
  33. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 p. 96
  34. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 pp. 109–110
  35. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 p. 289
  36. Burkitt, Read, Burkitt 1850 p. 154
  37. Biggs Burkitt and Read 1834 p. 170
  38. Book: Mead . Frank S . Samuel S . Hill . Craig D . Atwood . Handbook of Denominations in the United States . 12th . 2005 . . Nashville . 0-687-05784-1 . 207–208 .
  39. Declaration of the Reformed Baptist Churches in North Carolina . The Reformer . January 1827 . 8 . 45 . 1–6 . Philadelphia . J. Rakestraw . en.
  40. Declaration of the Reformed Baptist Churches in North Carolina . The Telescope . 25 November 1826 . 3 . 22 . 35–36 . New York . W. Beach . en.
  41. Biggs Burkitt and Read 1834 p. 235
  42. Garrett 2009 p. 209
  43. Web site: The Kehukee Declaration of 1827 . baptiststudiesonline.com.
  44. Biggs Burkitt and Read 1834 pp. 240–241
  45. Sparks 2005 pp. 201, 240
  46. Sparks 2005 p. 244
  47. Hassell and Hassell 1886 p. 800
  48. Hassell and Hassell 1886 p. 801
  49. Hassell and Hassell 1886 p. 804
  50. York 1993 § 8 p. 6
  51. Book: . . Religious Bodies: 1926 . 1930 . US Government Printing Office . 205 . https://books.google.com/books?id=zo_YAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA205 . en . Primitive Baptists: Table 7; Number and Membership of Churches, Value of Edifices, Debt, Expenditures, and Sunday Schools, by Associations, 1926 . II: Separate Denominations: Statistics, History, Doctrine, Organization, and Work .
  52. York 1993 § 8 p. 16