Local History
This history of Crystal Lake’s Methodist congregation was provided by First Church:
First Church History
Around 1835, the first settlers came to Crystal Lake and found it a good place to live. That same year, George Stickney, Christopher Walkup, Uriah Cottle and A.W. Beardsley became instrumental in establishing the community’s first church, known as the Virginia Church after the area from which many settlers came. This church was a non-denominational body formed to serve the religious needs of the area. The organizational meeting for the Virginia Church was held in the home of Uriah Cottle, a Methodist, and the community’s first religious service was held in the home of Christopher Walkup.
In 1839, the Methodist Church in Crystal Lake was organized. By the following year, the membership was 51. In 1841, Methodist Camp meetings were held in the wooded area near what is now the town of Woodstock. By 1846, services were being held in a log cabin at the northwest corner of McHenry Avenue and Virginia Street (Route 14).
In 1858, a church was built at a cost of $1,400 on Virginia Street across from what is now McCormick Park. However, most members lived in Nunda, so a hall was rented there and services were held in both locations. The union of those two congregations came at about the same time that the villages of Nunda and Crystal Lake joined to become one. The 1858 church building was later sold to the German Lutheran Congregation and moved to McHenry Avenue near Church Street.
In the late 1860s, the old Congregational Church building (built in 1849) was purchased for $400. It was fixed up and moved to the corner of Crystal and South Railroad St (now Grant and Woodstock Streets). In the early 1870s, this church building was sold to Josiah Walkup and it was remodeled into a residential dwelling. Later this building was added onto the existing Pingry Hotel to make it larger.
In 1873, a new church was built at the corner of Brink and Williams St. at a cost of $2,500. It was dedicated November 15, 1874. It would serve the Methodist congregation for the next 80 years.
A three story, five bedroom parsonage was built in 1897 at the corner of Brink and Williams Streets and was used until 1958. In the mid-1950s, the parsonage was moved to 20 Paddock Street.
The 1873 church was extensively remodeled in 1893 and again in 1920. In the latter remodeling, a new pipe organ was dedicated. The church then boasted a membership of about 200 and the familiar spire of this church could be seen from almost any approach to Crystal Lake. It had become a landmark. The downtown church also became known as “the little white church surrounded by parking meters”.
In 1948, the membership was listed at 365, with 25% of the increase having been in the previous four years. By 1952, it became apparent that new facilities were needed to serve the growing congregation and the growing community. The church property was sold to Mr. Lester Gieseke. When it came time to demolish the church, the building was “put up for grabs”- free to the party who would haul it away from its site in the heart of Crystal Lake’s expanding business district. (see Lost Crystal Lake article) Saved from demolition were the stained glass windows, the bell and a few of the pipes from the organ, some of which were used in the organ in the new church.
A $200,000 church was designed by architects Stade and Cooley. With income from the sale of the downtown properties, $30,000 in advance gifts pledged by 24 members and an initial pledge goal of $70,000, it was decided to proceed with a new church. In October 1952, two hundred members and friends gathered for the groundbreaking at the new church site at the corners of Crystal Lake Ave, Dole Ave, and Pine Ct. Construction began April 11, 1954 with the cornerstone laid in July of 1954. The first formal services in the new church were held on February 5, 1955. As church-goers entered the narthex of the new church, they were greeted by the Good Shepherd window from the 1873 church.
A new parsonage was designed by member Fred Lindsay and ground was broken for the home at 303 W. Crystal Lake Ave on August 31, 1958. This home was first occupied by Rev. Lloyd Coleman in January of 1959. It has since been sold.
Between the years 1953 and 1968, memorial pews replaced the original chairs, memorial lights replaced the original lighting in the sanctuary (now Hale Chapel), a pipe organ with chimes and a memorial carillon were added to the church. In addition to the original four and a half acres, three more lots were purchased for parking and recreation. An addition gave the church space for 12 school classrooms (allowing for the preschool to open), a memorial chapel, a pastor’s study, a library and much-needed storage space.
In later years, additional updates and landscaping occurred, including the addition of the Chapel in the Woods in 1971. In 1994, a new sanctuary and more education space were added at a cost of over $2.4 million. In the early 2000s, a columbarium was erected. The church celebrated its 175th anniversary in 2014 with several events, including a meal and a hoe-down as well as a reunion of sorts with prior pastors. In 2021, the memorial courtyard in the center of the church was beautifully renovated.
Over time, the Virginia Church has had several names, including the Methodist Episcopal Church and First Methodist Church. In 1968, it became the First United Methodist Church and that was later shortened to First Church.
A History of Pastors:
L.S. Walker
O.A. Walker William Gaddis William Valette Edwin Brown H. Minard George Murphy S.H. Stocking W.A. Smith W.S. Harrington W.A. Smith W.S. Harrington Edwin Brown Levi Davis G.H. Perry Rufus Wilkinson W.M. Miller Edwin Brown J.S. Norris A.J. Scott L. Clifford E.M. Boring Samuel Hewes G.L. Wiley O.E. Burch J.H. Bacon J.T. Robert J.M. Conlee O.H. Cessna George Wells William Pierce |
1839-1840
1840-1842 1842-1843 1843-1844 1844-1845 1845-1849 1849-1850 1850-1861 1861-1862 1862-1863 1863-1864 1864-1865 1865-1866 1866-1867 1867-1868 1868-1869 1869-1870 1870-1871 1871-1872 1872-1873 1873-1874 1874-1875 1875-1876 1876-1978 1878-1879 1879-1881 1881-1882 1882-1885 1885-1887 1887-1888 1888-1891 |
J.R. Hamilton
M.H. Plumb A.H. Kistter W.H. Locke William Smith W.B. Dobie Herbert Cockerill Robert Pate T.A. Brewster W.E. Grose H.P. Barnes M.J. Mumford H.D. Dick R.W. Putnam E.K. Hester O.T. Canfield Albert Wagner Miron Morrill Russell Howard George Draper Gilbert Weisshaar Lloyd Coleman John Figley James Paulson Eugene Wykle Raymond Rhoads J. Raymond Miller E. Doyle Blanton David Seyller Steven Bullmer Scott Field Lisa Kruse-Safford |
1891-1892
1892-1893 1893-1895 1895-1898 1898-1901 1901-1905 1905-1907 1907-1911 1911-1916 1916-1918 1918-1920 1920-1921 1921-1925 1925-1928 1928-1930 1930-1934 1934-1936 1936-1939 1939-1941 1941-1945 1945-1958 1958-1963 1963-1968 1968-1973 1973-1984 1984-1989 1989-1999 1999-2002 2002-2008 2008-2013 2013-2019 2019- |