The Oklahoman

Historic church

A Virginia house of worship recently celebrated its 400th anniversar­y.

- BY JULIE ZAUZMER FOR THE WASHINGTON POST]

DISPUTANTA, VA. — Long before American independen­ce, before the Pilgrims even landed at Plymouth Rock, there was Martin’s Brandon Church.

And now, the Rev. Eve Butler-Gee looks at her flock at the same Martin’s Brandon Episcopal Church in amazement. “They’re faithful. Every single one of them is engaged and active,” she said. But then again, it’s no wonder: “They’ve been doing this for 400 years, and they’re not about to stop now.”

The church, one of the oldest in the United States that still operates, celebrates its 400th birthday this year. And for many families in the rural congregati­on, the pink-colored house of worship near the James River has been part of their family stories for a very large portion of that time. “We’ve been coming here for seven generation­s. At least. We don’t have any records before the Civil War,” said Alecia Redfearn, 31, as the sixthgener­ation Martin’s Brandon mom juggled Caroline, 3, and Bennett, 4 weeks — the seventh generation.

Redfearn spent her childhood here and never left, and she soaked up more than the light streaming in through the stained-glass window that, she can readily point out, is etched with the name of a Titanic survivor. “We live in the history here. That’s why I like history so much,” she said. “We take the ferry over to Williamsbu­rg. You go by Jamestown. You think, ‘This is where America started.’ “Today, shaped by that upbringing, she teaches history to students in grades six through 11.

Churchgoer­s chatting at the afterservi­ces lunch — as they ate fried and barbecued chicken, green beans and mac ‘n’ cheese, lemonade and sweet tea, and plate after plate of desserts — reeled off the family names of grandfathe­rs and great-grandmothe­rs, spinning a web of relationsh­ips that soon seemed to entwine almost everyone in the room.

Butler-Gee didn’t know that she herself had a family connection to Martin’s Brandon when she learned that her first assignment upon being ordained as an Episcopal priest, as a second career in 2012, would be at the oldest Episcopal church in the country. Her remarkable rediscover­ed family history was the subject of celebratio­n recently, the church’s most recent event commemorat­ing its quadricent­ennial anniversar­y this year.

The parish of Martin’s Brandon decided to celebrate four centuries of history with four events, one for every hundred years. So the community first reviewed the 17th century, starting with John Martin, one of the original settlers on the first boat from Britain to Jamestown, Virginia’s first permanent colony. Martin arrived in 1607 and endured the first brutal winters that nearly destroyed the infant settlement: The colony had 490 residents in October 1609 and just 60 still living six months later. According to a church history, those remaining colonists took a vote on whether to stay. The sole resident who voted against abandoning the New World was Martin.

Martin and the others stayed, and he acquired land, which he named “Brandon” in honor of his wife’s family name. Between 1613 and 1618 — the church is choosing to celebrate 400 years in this year — a congregati­on started worshippin­g on his land, at Martin’s Brandon. Historical documents indicate that by 1618, the church had a log building and a minister.

In his will, a wealthy parishione­r who died in 1658 left 2,000 pounds of tobacco to pay for repairs or rebuilding the church, and another 1,000 pounds of tobacco to pay for a silver communion set. That’s the set Butler-Gee used recently during the communion service.

The community also has reviewed the 18th century, when the congregati­on grew large enough for a new church building in 1723, and when a parishione­r donated a silver baptismal bowl in 1731 that’s been used for every baptism at Martin’s Brandon ever since.

Twist of fate

Recently, the discussion turned to the 19th century — when postRevolu­tionary backlash against the Anglican church, with its close ties to the king of England, left the Martin’s Brandon congregati­on so reduced in size that it worshipped outdoors, under a long, wooden arbor roofed with pine boughs. The minister who helped revive the congregati­on, and brought it to the point in 1856 that it could build a proud, pink-hued Tuscan-style building with a soaring bell tower, the building Martin’s Brandon still meets in today — was the Rev. Charles Minnigerod­e.

Minnigerod­e was a memorable character whose life story was the subject of a presentati­on during the church service at Martin’s Brandon recently. And in a twist of fate that shocked the new minister in the 21st century, it turned out that Minnigerod­e is Butler-Gee’s great-greatgrand­father.

Robert Doares was the one who figured out Butler-Gee’s ancestry.

Doares told the story at Martin’s Brandon that he hopes to eventually put in a book: How the young Minnigerod­e, caught smuggling pamphlets calling on the German peasantry to rise up against the ruling class, was thrown in prison but then allowed to immigrate to America. How he landed in Philadelph­ia, then came to the College of William and Mary to teach the classics, at a time when the faculty had just five professors. How the young professor, homesick for Germany at holiday time, introduced the first Christmas tree documented in Virginia — an instant hit.

When Minnigerod­e first became a full-time minister in the Episcopal church in 1847, his first assignment was Martin’s Brandon, just as his great-great-granddaugh­ter’s would be, 165 years later.

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 ?? [PHOTO BY JULIA RENDLEMAN, FOR THE WASHINGTON POST] ?? Churchgoer­s mingle recently after the service at Martin’s Brandon Episcopal Church’s 400th anniversar­y celebratio­n. This building dates to 1856.
[PHOTO BY JULIA RENDLEMAN, FOR THE WASHINGTON POST] Churchgoer­s mingle recently after the service at Martin’s Brandon Episcopal Church’s 400th anniversar­y celebratio­n. This building dates to 1856.
 ?? [PHOTO BY JULIA RENDLEMAN, ?? The Rev. Eve Butler-Gee prepares for a church service honoring the Rev. Charles Minnigerod­e, who was her direct ancestor.
[PHOTO BY JULIA RENDLEMAN, The Rev. Eve Butler-Gee prepares for a church service honoring the Rev. Charles Minnigerod­e, who was her direct ancestor.

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