Blooming Grove Methodist
Blooming Grove Methodist stands in a quiet corner of West Georgia, between Tallapoosa and Cedartown. Like many of the old sanctuaries scattered across rural Georgia, it is slowly falling back to the earth. Time has not been kind, but this little church served its community faithfully for more than 150 years. She is almost gone but not forgotten.
According to local history, the church was organized in 1856 in a simple log building that also served as a schoolhouse. J.W. Trawick was its first pastor. Records from the North Georgia Methodist archives add a fascinating detail: “At one time there were twenty or more springs of different minerals here, and it is said to have been the assembly grounds of the Cherokee Indians before the Trail of Tears.” Just across the mountains in Tallapoosa, Captain Tumlin organized a company of Georgia Mountain Volunteers, which included Sergeant Duncan H. Tally—grandfather of Oscar B. Tally, who later recorded these early remembrances and preserved his grandfather’s discharge papers from that tragic campaign.
Nearby is one of the county’s oldest cemeteries, where both settlers and enslaved people were buried, a sobering reminder of the community’s layered history. The surviving church history lists the names of some of the first settlers and pastors, closing with this reflection: “Thus Blooming Grove continues to work for social and civic righteousness, having graced the homes of the leaders of the present and past… to go forth and bless the world around us, while our farmers and merchants provide our food across the channels of service, like the great Master, who came not to be ministered unto, but to minister.”
We are grateful to Melvin Woodruff for bringing this fading jewel to our attention. Though the building will not be with us much longer, its story, its people, and its service to this corner of Georgia will live on.
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