Whites Chapel AME
Whites Chapel AME, located on the edge of Tallapoosa in Haralson County, is a sad example of a once-vibrant church lost to time. After standing for more than a century, the structure finally collapsed in June 2021 when the roof gave way. Years of neglect, fire damage, and the absence of a tin roof sealed its fate.
Built in 1907, Whites Chapel served its congregation until the 1980s. By the time it fell, most of its members were gone, and with no associated cemetery, little remains to preserve its memory. Like so many rural churches across Georgia, it stood as a symbol of faith, community, and survival before slipping quietly into ruin.
Whites Chapel represents a larger story of sweeping change after the Civil War. Following emancipation, newly freed African Americans formed their own congregations, creating churches that quickly became the social and spiritual center of their lives. In rural Georgia, where many had worked the cotton fields, churches like this one anchored communities. For Tallapoosa, the railroad and proximity to the river made it an attractive place for cotton manufacturing, and many families left small farms to settle there. Later, as cotton declined and opportunities shifted to industrial cities, families migrated north in search of better lives. Whites Chapel reflects this history of resilience, migration, and change.
The AME (African Methodist Episcopal) Church itself grew out of the Free African Society in Philadelphia in 1787 and became a formal denomination in the early 1800s. After the Civil War, AME churches spread rapidly across the South, providing education, worship, and community leadership. By 1880, the denomination counted over 400,000 members, and today it has a global presence across five continents.
Though Whites Chapel has now disappeared, it was once an important spiritual home to generations of African Americans in Haralson County. Its fall is a reminder of the urgency to document and preserve these churches before they vanish completely.
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