Bethel Methodist

Imagine yourself in the 1840s, nearly 180 years ago. The United States, under President Martin Van Buren, was still a young, expanding nation. There were no automobiles, no electricity, no telephones—just a frontier world of farms, faith, and family. Travel meant walking, riding horseback, or bumping along in a horse-drawn cart. On Sunday mornings, families hitched their horses and gathered at the newest church on the east side of the Long Cane River—Bethel Methodist Episcopal Church, organized in 1830.

In 1836, James R. Starr of Chambers County, Alabama, sold Erasmus C. Alford a parcel of land, reserving two acres for the church where the first meeting house already stood. This log structure, built by local settlers, featured a balcony for enslaved worshippers and likely resembled the log church depicted in the stained-glass window of today’s sanctuary. Inside, men and women sat separately—divided by a long partition—and services were led from a high, enclosed pulpit reached by several steps.

The earliest known pastor was Rev. H. J. Ellis, who served in 1879. Nearby stood a one-room schoolhouse, established as Bethel Academy in 1887 on land granted by John C. Davidson.

The present church building, constructed in 1906 on land donated by W. F. Hogg, bears the cornerstone of Pastor W. C. Fox. In its early days, Bethel was known for its Wednesday barbecues, prepared by Abb Hardy and attended by crowds from miles around—businesses even closed at noon for the occasion.

Through generations of faithful stewardship, Bethel has remained a “house of God”—a blessing to the community it has served since pioneer days. As one beloved hymn reminds us, “There’s a church in the valley by the wildwood, no lovelier place in the dale.”

The history was provided by Daniel Bookhoop from the church archives.

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