Sunday, May 17, 2009
1st United Methodist, Searcy
Labels:
Arkansas,
church,
Methodist,
Searcy,
stained glass,
White County
Thursday, May 14, 2009
1st Baptist, Morrilton
Labels:
Arkansas,
Baptist,
church,
Conway County,
Morrilton,
stained glass
Sunday, May 10, 2009
The Blue, Hempstead County
You see the old church, and you think nothing of it. At first.
‘Did I see what I thought I saw?’ you say to yourself, and without thinking at all, you turn down the side street that leads to the parking lot.
Parking lot is a grand term for this field. No one has parked here for years.
No congregation, anyway.
The weeds brush your thighs as you walk across what was once a churchyard. You feel the soft sound and think, ‘Ahhh.’
What you saw, what drew you to it in the first place, isn’t the lines. It isn’t the Greek Revival austerity, the twin doorways, the perfectly preserved windows. It isn’t the massive belfry. It isn’t the wonderful location, set in the crook of the road, where you’d have to slow down just enough to want to visit the building.
What you saw was a wink of cobalt. A blue so intense, yet so elusive, that you had to know what made it happen.
And once alongside the church, you see.
God, but you want to be in there. (You chuckle at the inside joke. God indeed).
It’s not the draw of the church, and it’s not your desire to worship. You’ve been an atheist all your life, and the Christian Church holds nothing for you.
But this. Oh, this.
It’s the blue. It’s The Blue.
You walk up to the one of the windows, and you see what made you come here.
The light comes from the windows on the other side, and though it comes from blue, and so loses much of its intensity, there is no doubt in your mind that the blue coming from the window colors your face. You feel it. You know it’s there. And the contentedness it projects makes you wonder.
Did the people inside experience this?
You feel bad for those that haven’t, and probably never will.
Some atheist you are.
from Jim's notes:
The church was in Columbus, in Hempstead County. A friend told me about Columbus, and I included it in my tour of southwest Arkansas, where I was nearly overwhelmed with the fecundity of abandonment. I’ve included no less than six stories inspired by stores, schools, homes, churches, storm cellars, and sheds from the town and its surrounds. Every window in the church was intact at the time of my visit in 2008. It was crushed by a falling tree (probably the one at the right of the photograph) six months after the shot was taken.
Labels:
Abandoned Arkansas,
Arkansas,
church,
Hempstead County,
stained glass
Abandoned Arkansas
I'm going to start working into this project some offerings from my brother, Jim King. They are photos and short works of fiction from his upcoming book, "Abandoned Arkansas." The book depicts houses, barns, stores and about anything with four (or fewer) walls. He sent me pictures of seven former churches, their accompanying stories and notes on each. Because in most cases we don't know the names of these former churches, I have substituted the story title. Anyone with information on the history of these buildings is encouraged to weigh in in the comments.
We'll start with..
We'll start with..
Friday, May 8, 2009
All Souls, Scott
Built in 1906, All Souls was interdenominational before such a thing was popular.
Labels:
Arkansas,
church,
interdenominational,
Lonoke County,
Pulaski County,
Scott
Sunday, May 3, 2009
First Presbyterian, Dardanelle
Raising the money needed to pay for the construction was a labor of love on behalf of the Ladies Missionary Society of First Presbyterian. The following is excerpted from "A Brief History of the First Presbyterian Church: 'The Church Built by Women.'"
"During the first year of this effort, the ladies gave each member a quarter dollar. Like the servants in the Bible, they were to invest this money 'in ways to make it multiply.' One woman bought a yard of calico and bought an apron which she sold for a dollar. Some ladies raised as much as $5.00. They held bake sales, sold manufacturers samples, and some rode the Ola train to Clarksville during peach picking season and added their wages to the building fund. Soon, the 'money-making ladies' had caught the fancy of the whole town and Dardanelle waited to see what they would do next.
"Some of the women were from 'the best families,' and had never worked at anything more strenuous than embroidery or flower arrangement, but when Calvin Batson, a prominent farmer and a member of the church, jokingly suggested that he would give them a job picking cotton, they donned sunbonnets and headed for the field. The business houses closed their doors for the day, and the men turned out in a body to watch them pick. They cheered the ladies on from their seats on split rail fences, while they leisurely ate their picnic dinners from lard buckets.

"From the outset, the members were determined that the building be paid for at

The brochure quoted was compiled by Betsy Snyder Harris, a woman I met a few weeks ago, whose spirit and enthusiasm for the church and Dardanelle's history is contagious. I spent a day there last week re-securing bracers bars to some of the windows and I consider it an honor to work on the oldest church building in Dardanelle. Thanks to Betsy and Pastor Kelly Pearson.
Labels:
Arkansas,
church,
Dardanelle,
Presbyterian,
stained glass,
Yell County
Friday, May 1, 2009
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