| In the summer of 1740
the Presbytery of Donegal began to provide
preaching for Presbyterians who had settled along
Marsh Creek and took steps to organize a church. Lower
Marsh Creek Presbyterian Church owes its origin
to the fact that in 1741 there began a schism in
the Presbyterian Church in the colonies which
lasted until 1758, a schism which was a result of
the George Whitefield revival meetings and the
questions that arose concerning the
qualifications of ministers.
Sympathizers with
Whitefield and the Tennents withdrew from the
regular Presbyterian churches and organized what
they called New Side Presbyterian churches, the
original churches being known thereafter as Old
Side Presbyterian churches, until the reunion in
1758.
Just when the rift
reached Marsh Creek is not known, but such
sympathizers in the Marsh Creek Presbyterian
Church, which was organized in 1740, withdrew in
1748 and were organized by the Reverend Andrew
Bay, a minister of the New Side Presbytery of
Newcastle, into the Presbyterian Church of Lower
Marsh Creek.
Their first house of
worship was a log church located at a graveyard
on the west bank of Marsh Creek, a few miles
southwest of the Mother Church which later
relocated in Gettysburg. The church was crude
throughout, having benches instead of pews, and
without any facilities for fire in winter. In it
the Presbytery of Carlisle was organized on
October 17, 1786.
In 1790 the
congregation chose a new site several miles away
near "The Great Road", now known as the
Fairfield Road, and the present substantial stone
structure was erected in a grove of giant oaks,
near a spring in the vale. Families brought
stones to church services from the various farms
for use in constructing the church.
Originally there were
four doors, the seats were very straight and
highbacked, the pulpit was narrow and deep, and
it was elevated on the north side of the
building. Like the log church, it had no
facilities for any fire in winter until many
years after its erection.
About 1850 the stone
church was thoroughly remodeled, the improvements
being: a new roof, floor and pulpit; seats
lowered and sloped in the back; venetian blinds;
carpeting; a vestibule with two doors into the
vestibule and the original doors closed. In the
Civil War during the Battle of Gettysburg the
church was used as a field hospital by the
Confederate troops.
In 1891 the stone
church again was remodeled; the two doors closed
and one opened in the center; the east windows
closed and stained glass put in the rest; and the
present pews and pulpit furniture added. In more
recent years it has been repainted and repainted,
electric lighting has been installed, and
Fellowship Hall has been excavated and finished
in the basement.
Although renovated many
times, the ancient stone church still stands, a
credit to the congregation and a comfortable
house of worship wherein to praise God for his
many blessings. It is an historic landmark which
says to present day successors of Presbyterian
pioneers: "Come to the church in the
wildwood, oh, come to the church in the vale; no
spot is so dear to my childhood as the little
'stone' church in the vale".
The Reverend Alexander
Dobbin, who established a famous classical school
in Gettysburg, was closely enough associated with
Lower Marsh Creek Presbyterian Church to be
buried in its old cemetery. As Pastor of Rock
Creek Reformed Presbyterian Church and later on
as Pastor of "Old Hill Church" he was a
big factor in forming a union of the Reformed and
the Associate Presbyterian groups. This led to a
merger in 1858 with another Presbyterian group,
resulting in the United Presbyterian Church, a
part of the merger which formed the present
United Presbyterian Church in the United States
of America.
In the late 1950's, the
Congregation excavated the area beneath the
Sanctuary to add Christian Education rooms and a
Fellowship Hall due to enrollment increases.
In the 1970's, a Manse
was constructed near the church to provide
housing for the called Minister. In addition, a
Sexton's house is located next to the church
building itself.
In 1995, a new, 6000
square foot Christian Education Building was
constructed. It housed 6 SS rooms, a Pastor's
Office, a Church Office, large kitchen, and a
larger Fellowship Hall to seat 125. By God's
grace and goodness, the entire project debt was
retired in 3 years time.
In 1997, the Sanctuary
was complexly refinished and repairs made to the
pews and furniture. This work was able to be
completed thanks to a generous donation by the
family of a former member.
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