The Quasqui-centennial Celebration is October
11th! Members of Zachary United Methodist Church will be celebrating
One-hundred-twenty-five years of worshiping God on the same location.
From the Zachary Methodist Episcopal Church South in 1890, to Zachary United
Methodist Church today, we have the distinction of praising our Lord on the
same location.
The first wooden church burned in 1914.
Later that same year, the second wooden church was built on the ashes of the
first church. In the mid-1940s, the church membership grew, and there was
a need to build a larger sanctuary. After a two plus years of a Capital
Campaign, the present brick sanctuary was completed in 1949. The second
wooden church moved to the east of where it sat and served as Sunday school
classes. They built the current sanctuary in the same location as
the two previous churches.
On October 11, present members will come
together with former members to celebrate our history and to look forward to
the future. It should be a homecoming for former members. There
will be “dinner on the grounds” after the single worship service. The
highlight of the event will be various historical displays, a PowerPoint of
forty plus wedding couples married in the church and the introduction of the
ten senior members of the congregation who participated in the Member Moments Oral
History Project. Ten members, most who are the last generation who lived
through the Great Depression, were interviewed about their memories of Zachary
Methodist Church, the town of Zachary, Louisiana and other firsthand
experiences they lived through. A limited number of booklets covering the
interviews, with a brief history of the church, will be available at the
Quasqui-centennial event for $5.00 each.
The eldest member recording memories of her
life at Zachary United Methodist Church was Minnie Kirkwood Jackson. She
was born 27 June 1925 in Zachary, the daughter of Ramey and Myrtle Davis
Kirkwood. She was born at home, located then at Old Baker and Zachary
Highways, where her five brothers and five sisters were also born and grew to
adulthood. At one time, her corner of Zachary was known as
“Kirkwoodville” because after her father’s brothers married they moved back to
the same area and raised their families as well. “Kirkwoodville was about
a mile south of the present First Baptist Church and my grandfather, David
Smiley Kirkwood, owned and operated a grocery store across from our house,”
Minnie remembered fondly. She also tells that “The school bus made an
early run on the outskirts of Zachary, then it dropped off those students, and
it came back and got us. We filled the entire bus. I graduated from
Zachary High School in 1943” Minnie recalled. She married Gordon B. Jackson in
1945, and they had one daughter, Delrina Jackson Maney.
Minnie remembers Felicia Lipscomb (now Fitzgerald) and Winfred McHost as her
best friends at church. Minnie also remembers attending the wooden church
and could remember Robin Pope ringing the bell to call everyone to
church. She remembers there was no air conditioning back then, and they
raised the stained-glass windows for ventilation to cool the church. That
was the second wooden church because the first one burned in 1914. She
remembered that, “there were at one time, 47 members of the Kirkwood family
that attended the Methodist Church in Zachary. Now I am the last. I
have two brothers and two sisters surviving and my sister Vida Mae is not doing
well. I am worried about her.” She recalls fundraising for the new
brick church in 1948 and 1949; it was an exciting day when they rang the bell
for service in that new church in 1949. “Then we outgrew that church and
needed more room, so the members raised more money and added on to the front of
it in 1994. That is the church you see today.” I learned more but
it will be published in a book, or online, for the 125th Anniversary event on
October 11, 2015. When asked if she had any words of wisdom, she
said “Well, the greatest thing in life is the peace of mind you get from
Christ, through trials and tribulations. As for me at my age, kind words
and ice water are all I need to be happy."
The above comments are a sample of what I
learned on my Oral History Interviews. Next week, you will get another
sampling from one of the interviews. Have a great week and enjoy the air
conditioning and personal computer. They are new inventions and, praise
the Lord; I was born after these great inventions were made and
produced. Be thankful every day for what the Lord has made, and how
He has assisted men in making. I will be blogging Member Memories History
Interviews over the next ten to twelve weeks. I hope you enjoy their
first-hand account of history.

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