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1932 Stories

AN EARLY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

By Zelma Hansen, Dist. 117

 The First Presbyterian church of Brookfield township was organized in Ottawa in 1833. The church organization was moved in 1840 to Brookfield township because all their principal members who supported it lived south and east of the Illinois river. It was six and eight miles east and south that the people lived. They needed the church nearer, because the roads were so bad that it was difficult to get to church in rainy weather. During the spring and autumn months roads were almost impassable.

Because very little of the land was tiled there were sink holes and bogs in the road. Also, the only means of transportation was by horses. Most of the families used wagons, although a few soon procured carriages, which were considered luxuries.

The church building was not brought from Ottawa, but the membership was organized there. They worshipped in schoolhouses until they decided to build this church. The same building is still in use. When first built they used timber from one of the original timber growths. There was quite a large growth of trees along the Illinois river. They gradually built the church larger as the membership grew. Later it was remodeled in keeping with the times. It always has been kept in good condition.

The Brookfield church cost one thousand, five hundred dollars. Part of the money was from a loan from the Presbyterian church office, which did not have to be paid back as long as it remained a Presbyterian church.

There is not a definite idea as to who built this church, but the Rev. George Marsh had a great influence in building it.

When the people of the First Presbyterian church started to hold meetings there, there were only thirty people attending the services. This included only a few families, as families were very large.

The first pastor of the Presbyterian church was the Rev. George Marsh. He came here as a missionary. Then he began preaching sermons for the people of Brookfield township. He originally lived in Norfolk county, Massachusetts. When twenty years of age he moved to the state of New York. When he was thirty-eight years of age he came to Illinois and settled on section sixteen of Brookfield township. This was his by right of claim. He had studied for the ministry in Massachusetts before coming here and was ordained in Ottawa in 1847 or 1848.

Three of the Marshes were clerks in different sessions. Rev. George Marsh was clerk of the session for thirty years. His son, John James Marsh, was elected clerk when his father resigned. He signed the book for thirty years. Then John James Marsh's son, George Marsh, was clerk for many years.

They have just recently remodeled it. They remodeled it in 1915. They put it on a cement foundation and built many other rooms in it to be used for departmental work. It looks very modern now.

They have erected a memorial window for the Rev. George Marsh. They have his name printed on the window. They have changed all the other things in the church except the pulpit, which was there when the Rev. George Marsh first came.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 92.


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