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History of Corinth

Established 1869

Among the first settlers in the vicinity of Hickory Tavern in the mid-nineteenth century were Adolphus L. Shuford and Henry W. Link, loyal members of the German Reformed Church. In 1860, these men sought the services of Dr. Jeremiah Ingold, pastor of the Grace Charge, to begin Reformed worship services in their town.

During the warm months, Dr. Ingold led services in an outdoor shelter. In the winter, he preached in the home of Henry Link (now the 1859 Cafe). In 1868, Dr. Ingold established Hickory's first school, the Free Academy. The Academy also became host to Reformed worship services that year, because the outdoor stand burned. The Academy also hosted worship services by many other denominations, as well as entertainment shows.

Corinth in 1887

On May 22, 1869, twenty-two charter members founded Corinth Reformed Church. Later they built a church structure in what is now Robinson Park, which served as their home from 1874-1887. A brick church at the corner of the present Second Street and Trade Avenue NW was Corinth's meeting place from 1888 to 1910. Under the leadership of Pastor Joseph Murphy, the congregation built a larger facility on the corner of Second Street and First Avenue NW, where the church assembled from 1910 to 1959. The current Gothic structure on Sixteenth Avenue NW was built on land donated by Shuford Mills, and was completed in 1959.

Corinth owns a proud heritage of strong community leadership, musical excellence, mission and service initiative, and denominational involvement. Five members of the church have become ordained ministers: Dr. Walter W. Rowe, Dr. Robert V. Moss, Jr. (who served as President of Lancaster Theological Seminary and of the United Church of Christ), Dr. D. Lee Jessup, Jr., Dr. Anne Abernethy Wepner, John Bigelow, and Jon Bailey.

Corinth in 1933

Corinth Reformed Church became Corinth Evangelical and Reformed Church in 1934 when two national church bodies merged which both had German backgrounds. In 1957, the United Church of Christ came into being. In recent years, Corinth has restored the name "Reformed" into its formal name to reflect our German Reformed heritage.

For more information about the heritage of Corinth, including our connection to the Arts and Science Center and Patrick Beaver library (we own the SALT block!) and how we came to have "Boy Scout Troop 1," call, write, or visit the church office and ask for the 125th Anniversary Booklet.

News & Events

Shop without Spending!

Sun May 17, 2-4pm

Join us for the next Women's Clothes Swap in the Fellowship Hall! Bring gently used spring/summer women's clothes, swimsuits, belts, purses, shoes, make-up, perfume, maternity, etc.

All sizes welcome! What doesn't go will be donated. Refreshments served; childcare available. RSVP to Jennie McNeil: 234-5766.

Race for the ROCK!

Sat May 23, 7-10:30am

2nd Annual 5k, Fun Run, and Tot-Trot -- proceeds benefit Corinth scholarships and Safe Harbor. Register (PDF, 220k). More info: 267-7277.

Jobseeking?

Tuesdays, 2pm

Corinth has a new ministry to support local jobseekers -- if you're "in the market" please join us! Contact: Jon Hasty

Our Mission

Our mission is to help people become disciples of Jesus Christ by sharing the Good News, worshiping God, loving others, learning from the Bible, and serving in God's world.

Phone

(828) 328-6196

Fax

(828) 328-6197

E-mail

Church Office

Pastor

Rev. Dr. Bob Thompson (more)

Faithful and Welcoming Churches