Henry's Chapel United Methodist Church
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H E R O K E E C O U N T Y |
Marker No: 17082
Aluminum 27 x 42 Subject Marker
Geographic: 32.109253, -95.044281
Location: 4539 FM 13 East, Troup
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Marker Text: The community of Henry’s Chapel was established six miles from Troup and named for Cumberland Presbyterian minister William Henry. Before 1914 many Methodists worshiped at Bethel located two miles north of Henry’s Chapel. R.E. Barron donated land to the Presbyterian church which, in turn, was donated to the Methodist church to establish Henry’s Chapel Methodist Episcopal Church South. In 1968, the denomination changed the church name to United Methodist. Circuit rider preacher Joe Wells became the first minister and served other churches in the Marshall district. In the early days, the church hosted summer revivals where prayer meetings and services were conducted under a brush arbor.
Church membership grew during the oil boom of the 1930s and, as a result, Henry’s Church built a parsonage and hired reverend J.L. Mcadams as the first permanent minister. The youth were organized in 1932 under the name Epworth league and, in 1939, changed the name to methodist youth fellowship to reflect the merger of three different factions of methodists. Women organized in 1935 under the name woman’s missionary society. In addition to giving spiritual guidance, the women’s group supported missions and raised funds to finance the building of a kitchen, fellowship room, and other church improvements. Through many economic and social changes, the church continues to meet the needs of the community as a place of worship and spiritual growth as well as social and civic events. (2012) |