East Bethel Community Church is reborn
Published: 04-05-2024 8:04 PM |
EAST BETHEL — From their cars, parked in a neat row on the grass outside, worshipers walked through the front door of the village’s stately, 200-year-old brick church for a symbolic rebirth.
Not only was it Easter Sunday, but some of the 30 or so people on hand hadn’t been in this church in years. Churches also die and are reborn. Inside, light streamed in through the windows, illuminating the worn but sturdy pews, the smooth white walls and the wide floorboards.
“Welcome to East Bethel Community Church,” Amos Post, the president of the church’s board, said from behind an electric keyboard, where he would play accompaniment for the hymns. “There’s a lot of people who put a lot of effort in to make this day possible.”
Over the past couple of decades, most of the church’s members have died off, leading to a period of inactivity of at least seven or eight years, Post said later in an interview. Dan Kinney, who is Post’s uncle, was president of the church’s board until the board stopped meeting several years ago. Since then, he’s acted as a caretaker, and has fielded requests from people who wanted to buy the church. Kinney called a meeting in October at which Post agreed to lead a new board.
“I knew I didn’t want to sell it,” Kinney told the 25 to 30 people at the October meeting. “I knew that it was important for it to be maintained as part of this community.”
Built in 1824 at a cost of $1,060, according to a 1974 history of churches in East Bethel, the brick church was originally for a Baptist congregation formed in 1812. In its two centuries, the church has had full years and empty ones.
“By the 1840s, the church entered a period of stagnation,” brought on in part by the 1833 establishment in the village of a “meeting house of Equal Rights” catering to all denominations, including the Baptists.
During its decades of neglect, the Baptist church was left open. Sheep from neighboring farms wandered in and out. By 1860 the building, then only 36 years old, needed significant repairs. A new pastor, Rev. Austin Norcross, “proved to be the right man for the hard task before him of reorganizing a disorganized church and rehabilitating its neglected place of worship.”
Article continues after...
Yesterday's Most Read Articles
After decades of solid membership, the congregation slowly dwindled, until by the late 1920s only two members remained and the church was forced to close. The state Baptist organization took the church over and proposed in 1931 to sell it as a paint shop.
“People were upset!” the church historians, Dorothy and Robert Hyde, wrote.
This outrage spurred the establishment of the East Bethel Community Association, which bought the church for $500 and, along with the Middle Branch Grange, sparked a long-lived revival. In 1954, congregants established the East Bethel Community Church Association to govern the church.
The 1974 history concludes with the news that the church association had purchased the neighboring Octagon schoolhouse for use as a community center, church offices, Sunday school classroom and library. “Worship service with music by a junior choir is held every Sunday.”
Some of the Easter attendees remember the church’s heydays. Dalene (Rogers) Whitcomb grew up going to the East Bethel church and attended the Octagon school through eighth grade before heading over the ridge to Whitcomb High School.
“I was married in this church,” she said. She attended on Easter with her daughters Jolene Snelling and Lisa Flint. Snelling recalled attending Sunday school in the Octagon.
“It was always fairly small,” Judy Powell, who went to church in East Bethel and Randolph Center when she was a child, said after the Easter service. She was last in the church in 2011, for her mother’s funeral. “That was about the time that it started to die off,” she said.
Powell’s husband, David, was a longtime Hartford firefighter, but they moved back to the Middle Branch a few years ago to be closer to Judy’s family. She’s now on the church’s board. “It needs to somehow continue to serve the community,” she said.
What that service will look like is unclear. Pastor Ben Wolfe, who led the Easter service, has been thinking for some time about how a faith community should organize.
“You make sure it’s all about the people,” he said after the service, “then figure out what the building can do for you.”
As the church’s history suggests, though, it’s hard to separate the physical structure from the spirit within it.
The board plans to evaluate both the church and the Octagon. Wiring and heating upgrades are overdue. There’s a well and septic, Post said, but the buildings don’t currently have running water.
The board also will be “talking about whether we want to try having more regular services there in the summer,” Post said. How it could further serve the community also is up for discussion. A food shelf and services for people battling substance use disorder have come up, Post said.
“The other need, I think, for our community is creating a place where people can gather,” he said.
The work the community did to clean the church and to hold an Easter service are steps in that direction.
Alex Hanson can be reached at ahanson@vnews.com or 603-727-3207.