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Killingworth Churches
Emmanuel
Episcopal Church
Emmanuel
Episcopal Church was organized in the late eighteenth
century as the Episcopalian Society of North Bristol
(now North Madison). The Society organized itself as a
parish on July 10, 1800. Nineteen of the original
members were from North Bristol and two were residents
of North Killingworth. An influx of members from North
Killingworth soon after changed the balance of the
Society and it became known as the Episcopalian Society
of North Bristol and North Killingworth. In 1802, the
Society voted to construct a church in Killingworth on
land belonging to Bezaleel Bristol “near Miss Lucy
Blatchley’s.” Construction began in May of 1803 and a
group of members from North Bristol decided they would
build their own church in North Bristol. The church was
never built and the members compromised in 1805 by
naming the church in Killingworth the Union Church.
Bezaleel Bristol quit-claimed the land to the church in
1807. The church was completed in 1816 and the sanctuary
was consecrated by Bishop Hobart of New York in 1817.
The first minister of the church was Nathan Bennett
Burgess who had been rector of Christ Church in Guilford
and St. John’s in North Guilford. In 1869, Dr. Samuel
Fuller, who served as priest in charge from 1867 to
1874, suggested the name be changed from Union Church to
Emmanuel Church. A chancel and a sacristy were added to
the original structure. In 1884, a bell and a bell tower
were added. The church received an extensive
restoration in 1970.
The Rev.
George B. Gilbert became Priest-In-Charge of Emmanuel
Episcopal Church in 1909. He was a graduate of Trinity
College and of Berkeley Divinity School in Middletown.
He was known for giving a helping hand to hundreds of
families in Middlesex County, many of them entrenched in
poverty, especially during the Depression. He was
elected to the State legislature and campaigned for
better roads, cheaper electricity, and more adequate
housing. His informal style and populist political views
sometimes drew the disapproval of the church hierarchy
and some of his church members, but his desire to serve
the people drew wide admiration. The Christian Herald
sponsored a nation-wide contest to select a typical
country pastor and Gilbert was selected in 1939 from
1,000 nominees. He revitalized the church and made it
known to the world with his famous book “Forty Years a
Country Preacher” published in 1939.
The
Congregational Church in Killingworth
The first
pastor of the Congregational Church in the Second
Society was William Seward. The Rev. William Seward was
born in Guilford, July 27, 1712, the son of Deacon
William Seward of Durham. He graduated from Yale College
in 1734 and received a second degree in 1737. The Rev.
Seward was 26 at the time he became Pastor in North
Killingworth. During his ministry, the small parish grew
and became strong. It was said that he was not eloquent,
but impressive and knew the Scriptures well. He was much
respected and beloved among his people. During his
pastorate, he received 158 into full communion, and 466
owned the covenant. He baptized 1,343 in his own parish,
and married 307 couples. His ministry in Killingworth
lasted 44 years until his death in 1782 at the age of
70. This, as well as Jared Eliot’s, stands as one of the
longest ministries in a single church in New England.
The second pastor was the Rev. Henry Ely for whom the
Ely house was built in 1783.
In 1816, the
Second Ecclesiastical Society voted to build a new
meetinghouse. The present Congregational Church building
was raised in 1817 and completed in 1820. It was
dedicated to the service of God on May 31, 1820. The
design of the meetinghouse, as the church was referred
to then, has traditionally been attributed to Ithiel
Town, a well-known architect of the period from
Connecticut. The plan is typical of the churches of this
period with the long axis at right angles to the
highway, a vestibule at the front end, and a rectangular
audience room with the pulpit at the far end. The
building is 62 feet long and 48 feet wide, with a
graceful belfry of three major stages in front. A gilded
weather vane of wrought iron rises from a turned finial
on the apex. The front entrance steps and foundation are
built of quarried gray gneiss. One of the stones on the
west wall of the foundation bears the incised date July
2, 1817. The exterior walls of the church are covered by
narrow pine clapboards. There are twelve windows on the
north and south sides in two tiers of six and seven
windows in front. The beams that form the frame are oak;
the larger ones are broad ax hewn, while the smaller
ones are sawn.
Asahel
Nettleton, was a noted evangelist in the first part of
the nineteenth century. He was born in North
Killingworth April 21, 1783. He entered Yale College in
the fall of 1805 and graduated in 1809. He became an
evangelist, and, over the next several years, preached
throughout Connecticut, New York, and Massachusetts. In
1820, he led an “ever-to-be remembered revival” in
Killingworth in which there were a total of 162
converts. Rev. Nettleton urged sinners to repent
immediately and is credited with bringing 30,000 people
into New England churches. He contracted typhus fever in
1822, an illness from which he never completely
recovered. In 1824, he completed Village Hymns, a hymn
book that was very popular at the time. He died on May
16, 1844.
One of
Killingworth’s most notable citizens was Titus Coan who
was missionary to the Hawaiian Islands from 1834 to
1882. His long course of service has few parallels in
the annals of missionary life. Titus Coan was born in
1801 in a house located on a now unused portion of Titus
Coan Road. The house no longer stands but there is an
inscription on a stone nearby noting his birthplace. As
a boy, he worked on his father’s farm and received his
early education in the Killingworth schools and from
Rev. Asa King, the pastor of the Congregational Church.
When a child, he was rescued from drowning by a friend
and neighbor, Julius Stone. Later, he taught in the
green school house on Roast Meat Hill Road and in
neighboring towns. In 1829, he felt called by God and
decided to become a minister. He entered the Auburn
Theological Seminary in 1831. In 1834, he received
instructions as missionary to the Sandwich Islands
(Hawaiian Islands) from the American Board of
Commissioners for Foreign Missions. He toured the
islands preaching to the people and enduring great
hardships fording rivers, climbing mountains, and facing
tropical rains and sun. He was very popular with the
people, and his church in Hilo grew until it numbered in
the thousands, making it the largest Protestant Church
in the world. He baptized over 14,000 persons and is
sometimes called the “Saint Peter of Hawaii.” Titus Coan
died in 1882 and is buried in the Homeland Cemetery in
Hilo. |