Carrolls Methodist
Carroll’s Methodist may not appear from the outside to be nearly two centuries old, but the building standing here today was erected in 1833. The exterior is now covered in asbestos siding, hiding the original footings and support beams, and restoration work in the 1950s altered several features. Doors and windows were redesigned, and a portico with banisters was added. While these changes helped preserve the building, they also modified its historical character. Step inside, however, and the primitive beauty of this early church is still evident.
The earliest church history records its founding in 1797, named for the William Carroll family, early settlers of Franklin County. This was during the formative years of Methodism in both Georgia and America. Much of the credit for the church’s establishment belongs to Bishop Francis Asbury, born in England and sent to America in 1771 by John Wesley as a “traveling preacher.” Asbury preached anywhere people would gather—courthouses, fields, public squares—riding an average of 6,000 miles each year and speaking nearly every day. His tireless work greatly advanced Methodism in Georgia.
By 1814, Methodist membership in the state had surpassed 10,000, nearly doubling over the next fifteen years. By the start of the Civil War in 1861, Georgia was home to more than 97,000 Methodists. For Carroll’s, one significant moment came on November 22, 1799, when Bishop Asbury himself preached here. His diary entry records: “We drove 16 miles to Carroll’s Meeting House, a new log cabin in the woods. Some of the congregation are from the East and West parts of Maryland. I felt the Lord was with them. We have the kitchen house and chamber all in one and no closet but the woods.”
The current building replaced the original log structure in 1833 and was restored in 1951–1952 in memory of Rev. Nelson Osborn (1797–1873), who served the church for many years. Church records note that he preached 470 funerals and performed 540 marriages. Carroll’s Methodist has long been a beacon for spreading the Gospel in this part of Georgia, preserving the legacy of the pioneers who built it.
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