Extracted from Guide to Genealogical and Historical Research in Jefferson County, Tennessee, copyright ©1995 Billie R. McNamara. All rights reserved. Supplemented periodically as new information is located. Additions and corrections are welcome via the Contact Us link on this Web site.
Early churches in Jefferson County were organized by the Quakers, Baptists, and Presbyterians. Perhaps because the region was initially settled by Scots-Irish, Presbyterians were the first to establish congregations in present-day East Tennessee, just as they did in Jefferson County.
Hopewell Presbyterian Church, Dandridge, was organized in 1785 as the first church in the county. No minutes of this congregation, prior to 1816, exist; little is known of its earliest members. The first church building, a large, hewn-log house, was located near a spring behind the Hynds' family home. Westminster Presbyterian Church formed in 1787, approximately ten miles northeast of Dandridge. Members of Westminster broke away to form New Market Presbyterian (1826) and Mt. Horeb (1841). Concord Presbyterian, located about ten miles west of Dandridge, organized in 1853.
Lost Creek Monthly Meeting was established in 1797 by members of the Newhope Monthly Meeting in Greene County, with approval of the New Garden Quarterly Meeting in North Carolina. Administratively, Hopewell Monthly Meeting, in Frederick, Virginia, was the parent of Lost Creek. Friends had been resident in Jefferson County since about 1784, when John Mills brought his family into the area now known as Rocky Valley. Lost Creek, the only Quaker congregation in the county, still holds regular services in New Market.
(For a history of the Lost Creek meeting and a transcription of its earliest records, see William Hinshaw, Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy North Carolina (Ann Arbor, MI: Edwards Brothers, Inc., 1936; reprint ed., Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1969; reprint ed., 1978), pp. 1119, et seq.)
The first Baptist congregation was established in 1786 as French Broad Baptist Church. It met at Coon's Meeting House, two and one-half miles east of Dandridge (property of Michael and Rebecca Coons/Koontz). This church has a complete record from its beginning. Dumplin Baptist Church was organized in 1797, its members having petitioned the French Broad Church for permission in 1794. John Cate, Sr., donated land for building the church, which was organized in 1797. Interestingly, 23 of the 27 charter members of Dumplin Baptist were women. Tidence Lane, progenitor of several Jefferson County family lines, was the first Baptist minister to establish a permanent church in present-day East Tennessee (Buffalo Grove, in Washington County).
Early records of Methodism in Jefferson County are not clear as to the first congregations. Elizabeth Peck, wife of pioneer Mossy Creek settler Adam Peck, established a chapel on their plantation in the early 19th Century. Elizabeth Chapel had no minister, so one of the Pecks' slaves led services. First Methodist Church of Jefferson City evolved from Elizabeth Chapel. A brick building was erected in Dandridge in 1828, with a deed for the property following in 1829. First United Methodist, Dandridge, continues to hold services at that location today. The congregation divided over the slavery issue, with members of both segments using the same building.
The Brethren were originally represented in Jefferson County by the Hepner, Oren, and Finch families on Spring Creek, from about 1870. The families held regular Sunday School and had services when travelling preachers were available. A permanent minister arrived in 1875, and French Broad Church of the Brethren was built in Dandridge in 1885-86.
Church | Location | Date Founded |
Notes |
Beth-Car United Methodist | White Pine | 1788 | Extensive history of the church appears on pages 15-17 of the Jefferson County Heritage Book, published in 1996. |
Bethel Presbyterian | Dandridge | 1868 | History appears on page 17 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Concord Presbyterian | Dandridge | 1853 | |
Deep Springs Baptist | Deep Springs Community | 1895 | History appears on page 17 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Dumplin Creek Baptist | Dumplin Community | 1797 | Minutes, 1797-1860, are available on this site. |
Ebenezer United Methodist | White Pine | 1822 | History appears on pages 17-18 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
First Baptist Church | Dandridge | 1786 | Originated as Lower French Broad Baptist Church. History appears on page 18 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
First United Methodist | Dandridge | 1805 | |
First United Methodist | Jefferson City | 1788 | Organized by Elizabeth Peck, wife of pioneer settler
Adam Peck, as Peck's Chapel. John, a devout slave of the Peck
family, served as the first pastor. Note: a church history was published in 2000. Please write to the church at 2011 Branner Ave., Jefferson City, TN 37760 for details. |
First Presbyterian | Jefferson City | 1867 | Organized as Mossy Creek Presbyterian. History appears on pages 18-19 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
First Baptist | Jefferson City | 1834 | Merger of Black Oak Baptist and Oakland Baptist in 1841 formed Mossy Creek Baptist. Name changed to First Baptist in 1902. History appears on page 18 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
French Broad Church of the Brethren | Oak Grove Community | 1870 | Began as a family congregation. Rev. Reuel B. Pritchett founded the Jefferson County Museum in 1955. History of church appears on page 19 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Friendship Baptist | White Pine | 1819 | |
Hebron Presbyterian | Mt. Horeb Community | 1874 | Formed from split of Mt. Horeb Presbyterian Church's congregation. |
Hopewell Presbyterian | Dandridge | 1785 | Jefferson County's first church. History appears on page 20 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Lost Creek Friends Monthly Meeting | Lost Creek (near New Market) | 1797 | History appears on page 21 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Loy Memorial United Methodist | New Market | 1908 | History appears on page 21 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Mill Spring Baptist | Mill Springs Community | 1828 | |
Mount Horeb Presbyterian | Mt. Horeb Community | 1841 | Hebron Presbyterian Church formed from a split of the congregation. History appears on pages 19-21 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. Partial history is available on this site. |
Mt. Pleasant United Methodist | White Pine | 1876 | History appears on page 22 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
New Market Presbyterian | New Market | 1819 | History appears on page 22 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Piedmont Baptist | Piedmont Community | 1891 | History appears on pages 22-23 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Pine Chapel Methodist | Swannsylvania Community | 1787 | Originally Seahorn's Chapel. History appears on page 23 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Pleasant Grove Baptist | Pleasant Grove Community | 1869 | History appears on page 23 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Pleasant Grove Piney Baptist | Strawberry Plains area | 1879 | Originally Crowder's Branch School and Church. History appears on page 23 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Pleasant Ridge Baptist Church | White Pine area | 1888 | Poplar Springs Baptist Church (now called Pleasant View Baptist Church) was its "mother" church. |
Seahorn's Chapel Methodist | Oak Grove Community | 1883 | Pine Chapel was its "mother" church. History appears on page 24 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Strawberry Plains United Methodist | Strawberry Plains | 1873 | |
Strawberry Plains Presbyterian | Strawberry Plains | 1873 | |
Swannsylvania Baptist | Swannsylvania | circa 1900 | History appears on pages 24-25 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Westminster Presbyterian | White Pine | 1787 | History appears on pages 25-26 of Jefferson County Heritage Book. |
Wooten's Chapel United Methodist | New Market | 1856 |
For copies of pages from the Jefferson County Heritage Book mentioned on this page, contact the Dandridge Memorial Library, P. O. Box 339, Dandridge, TN 37725.