RICHMOND —
In 1785, when the predecessor to Tates Creek Baptist Church was organized, Revolutionary War hostilities had ceased only four years earlier.
“There were no busy highways, only trails for horses and wagons,” wrote Betty Brandenburg, church clerk. “There also was no electricity and the many other modern conveniences we take for granted.”
And, Kentucky was still a part of Virginia.
Despite the difficulties of the frontier — Fort Boonesborough withstood a siege only seven years earlier — a group of hardy settlers formed a church that today is known as Tates Creek Baptist, Brandenburg said.
On Sunday, Aug. 29, the church at 1255 Boonesborough Road will celebrate its 225th anniversary with a traditional homecoming, potluck dinner and a special afternoon service. Activities will begin with Sunday school at 10 a.m. followed by the 11 a.m. worship service, meal and 2 p.m. service that will focus on Past, Present and Future.
Dr. Jerry Huffman is the pastor.
The church’s first building was located near the intersection of Tates Creek and Shallowford roads. The stone structure burned in 1850. A new, brick building was erected the following year on Boonesborough Road, and it still stands.
“Many things have changed in the 225 years our church was founded,” Brandenburg said, “but God’s word and the mission of Tates Creek Baptist Church to bring the gospel to our community and to the world remain the same.”
Edith Ratliff is the church’s historian.
Local News
Tates Creek Baptist Church set to celebrate 225 years
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Writer’s Note: Brenda Lambert is the reason I write articles today (Class of 2000).
Years ago, a little blonde-haired girl from Rockcastle County gathered her friends to “play school” in a 10-by-10 foot playhouse her father built.
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Dump of the Day
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Charles W. Peyton, 63, of East Irvine Street, was indicted Wednesday by a Madison grand jury. He used “forcible compulsion” to have sexual intercourse with a 14-year-old girl between March 1 and May 1 in 1998, according to the indictment. -
Woman fends off burglar with knife
A Berea woman used a kitchen knife to fend off an alleged burglar early Wednesday morning, and police say they were able to catch the man in the act.
Officers responded to a call in the 1000 block of Scaffold Cane Road about a man trying to break into a home, according to a release from BPD Public Information Officer Jake Reed. - More Local News Headlines
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