Smyrna Primitive Baptist

In the piney woods of southeast Georgia, Smyrna Primitive Baptist Church stood as a spiritual anchor for nearly two centuries. Organized in 1824, it was part of the “Crawfordite” Wiregrass Primitive Baptist tradition—unpainted, humble meetinghouses built by hand from native materials, with no steeples, no instruments, and a steadfast devotion to the old ways.

The church’s story reflects the divisions that shaped Baptist life in the 1800s: first, a split over missions and Sunday Schools, and later, a fierce dispute over the Georgia Homestead Act of 1868 that divided congregations into Crawfordites and Bennettites. Smyrna aligned with the Crawfordites, a faction that once thrived across south Georgia and north Florida but now numbers only a few churches.

By 1990, Smyrna’s long chapter closed. Its final member was too frail to transfer her membership before she passed, and Elder Ben Johnson delivered the last sermons. Yet its legacy was extraordinary—Smyrna produced nine ordained ministers and left a mark on generations of worshippers.

In her memoir Snow White Sands, Martha Mizell Puckett remembered Smyrna “standing among large pine trees.” Today, the pines are gone, replaced by oaks—but the memory of Smyrna, and the faith it represented, still lingers in the Wiregrass.

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