Hillsboro Methodist
In the early 1800s, John Hill, a farmer of modest means and limited education, made his way from North Carolina to Jasper County, Georgia. He believed deeply in religion, temperance, and education, and dedicated his life to these values. Near his home, he built a church, where he served as steward and class leader; a school, where he was trustee; and even a temperance society, where he served as president. In time, the community that grew around these institutions came to be called Hillsboro, in his honor.
In those days, Georgia was filling with new settlers as Native lands were ceded, but communities like Hillsboro remained isolated. Railroads and steamboats would not arrive until decades later, and even wagon roads did not reach the town until the 1880s. Yet circuit-riding preachers traveled the countryside from the late 1700s, ensuring that spiritual life remained strong. John Hill’s son, William Pinkney Hill, followed this tradition, becoming a Methodist minister in the Cedar Creek Circuit.
Church records suggest that the congregation Hill helped organize in 1808 first met under a brush arbor before building its first sanctuary in 1818. A second structure followed in 1852, erected on the site of a former Baptist church, though it was later moved. By 1877, plans for a new building were underway, and by 1884 a third church was completed on land donated by Frances McCullogh. In 1912, the congregation expanded again, adding Sunday School rooms with the help of the Women’s Methodist Society and Mrs. J.T. Garland.
Like so many rural communities, Hillsboro saw decline during the 20th century as young people moved away for work. By the 1960s, membership had dwindled to just 20. The church sat dormant for a time, but today we are pleased to share that a congregation once again gathers here, continuing the legacy of John Hill and the early settlers who built both a community and a faith tradition in this corner of Georgia.
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