Bethel Presbyterian

The history of Bethel Presbyterian is inseparable from the story of the northwest Georgia mountains and the Scots-Irish pioneers who settled them. It is also the story of Armuchee Academy, founded by Reverend T. C. Crawford, and of Bethel Yard, the timeless burying ground that holds generations of the community’s citizens.

Bethel Presbyterian has stood in its rural mountain setting since 1847. A year earlier, local Presbyterians petitioned the Cherokee Presbytery for their own church. The nearest congregation was Pleasant Green Presbyterian, on the far side of Taylor’s Ridge, a journey requiring departure before dawn and return after dark. The petition was approved, and a log meeting house was built on land donated by Augustus Bryant, which already held graves dating back to 1838.

Reverend T. C. Crawford arrived from North Carolina to open a school on this land. A Davidson College graduate and Columbia Theological Seminary student, Crawford founded Armuchee Academy, the first high school in Chattooga County. Students came from as far as Alabama and Tennessee. Both church and school thrived, and in 1849 the present clapboard sanctuary was built.

Bethel’s history reflects both beauty and hardship. The removal of the Cherokees and the devastation of the Civil War shaped the community deeply. Though Chattooga County saw no major battles, the war’s reach was felt. The first Confederate unit formed here, the “Chattooga Volunteers,” was organized only two months after Fort Sumter. Of the 291 documented burials in Bethel Yard, 27 are Civil War veterans.

The cemetery tells many stories: Reverend Crawford himself; the Millican brothers, Lewis and P.B., honored for gallantry at Chancellorsville and Gettysburg; and Cyrus Jenkins Vance, a family slave who followed his master through multiple campaigns and returned home after Appomattox. Perhaps the most tragic tale is that of the McFadden brothers, murdered by the Long-Roberts gang, one of several violent bands who terrorized mountain roads during the war.

Bethel Presbyterian and its burying ground remain a testament to the endurance, sacrifice, and community spirit of Georgia’s early settlers.

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