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- Date Created:
- 1831 to 2023
- Identifier:
- SBC.001.001.Tuckaseigee
- Description:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church was founded on October 28, 1899, and located in Martinsville, Virginia. Several names are used throughout the records books including Primitive Baptist Church at Martinsville, Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church, the Church Street Primitive Baptist Church Martinsville, Virginia, and Chatham Heights Primitive Baptist Church. Reference is made to the church meeting at a new location in Chatham Heights in 1963 which may explain some name variation. The church typically met monthly during which time minutes were recorded in the church record books. The first entry in this record book is February 1919 and the final entry is January 1973. The church records at the beginning start as early as 1899. A gap in entries exists from February 1945 until November 1959. Record books 2 through 4 (PBHLA-MPBC.002-.004) seem to fill this gap.
- Subject:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church and Primitive Baptists
- Creator:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church
- Location:
- Martinsville (Va.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- February 15, 1919 to January 27, 1973
- Resource type:
- Text
- Identifier:
- PBHLA-MPBC.001
- Description:
- The Ketockton Primitive Baptist Association was formed in August of 1766, accepting its articles of faith and holding its first session at what was then Ketocton Church in Loudoun County, Virginia. At that time the association was comprised of four churches including Ketocton Church, Mill Creek in Berkley County, Virginia, Smith’s Creek in Shenandoah County, Virginia, and Broad Run in Fauquier County, Virginia, all of which had previously been a part of the Philadelphia Association. The association grew to include churches from the Virginia, Maryland, and Washington D.C. regions and frequently corresponded with churches in North Carolina and Georgia. Through the years, and with new church formations and growth, churches moved in and out of the association. Early on, the Ketockton Primitive Baptist Association was known as the Ketockton Baptist Association and later addressed themselves as the Ketocton Association of Primitive Baptists, the Ketocton Old School Baptists, or Ketocton Primitive or Old School Baptists. The Ketockton Primitive Baptist Association at one point noted itself to be the second oldest Primitive Baptist association.
- Date Created:
- 1812 to 2005
- Identifier:
- Ketockton_Primitive_Baptist_Association
- Date Created:
- 1929 to 2011
- Identifier:
- Mill_Branch_Primitive_Baptist_Association
- Description:
- This collection documents the lives of Norman F. Williamson Sr., his wife, Fannie Lee McCall Williamson, and their son, Norman F. Williamson Jr., as they lived and served as Southern Baptist Missionaries in Japan from 1918-1937. The majority of the collection is photographic prints but there are also two Bibles, a 1911 Mercer University yearbook, and correspondence and accounts of the Williamsons' experiences as Southern Baptist Missionaries in Japan. The main subject of this collection is the missionary work of the Williamson family in Japan. Other subjects include Japanese culture and religion, Williamson family life, Williamson family activities while on furlough, and the Foreign Mission Board and Women's Missionary Union.
- Subject:
- Southern Baptist Convention. International Mission Board, Women's Missionary Union, Southern Baptist Convention. Foreign Mission Board, and Missions--Japan
- Creator:
- Norman F. Williamson Jr., Fannie Lee McCall Williamson, and Norman F. Williamson Sr.
- Language:
- Japanese and English
- Date Created:
- 1900 to 1979
- Identifier:
- ARC071
- Description:
- The Upper Country Line Primitive Baptist Association formed from Country Line Primitive Baptist Association which itself had formed out of the Flat River Association. In 1805 the Flat River Association divided into the Flat River and Country Line Associations due to the large number of churches. The first session of Country Line was held in August of 1806. In 1905 the Country Line Association also divided, due to large membership, into Upper and Lower Country Line Associations using the South Hyco Creek as the dividing line. Upper Country Line was assembled in August of 1906, comprised of churches mostly located in North Carolina. The association regularly maintained communication with churches and associations in North Carolina and Virginia.
- Date Created:
- 1907 to 2014
- Identifier:
- Upper_Country_Line_Primitive_Baptist_Association
- Description:
- Black Creek Primitive Baptist Association was formed close to the year 1875. It was comprised of churches mostly in North Carolina and communicated regularly with churches and associations in North Carolina and Virginia and at times other states. The association generally convened annually in October for three days. It appears there may have been a division around the year 1954 at which point some churches left to form another association under the same name of Black Creek Primitive Baptist Association.
- Date Created:
- 1897 to 2005
- Identifier:
- Black_Creek_Primitive_Baptist_Association_1875
- Description:
- Little River Primitive Baptist Association began around the year 1829, meeting annually in September. It was comprised of churches in North Carolina and communicated with associations and churches in North Carolina, Virginia, and South Carolina.
- Date Created:
- 1917 to 1991
- Identifier:
- Little_River_Primitive_Baptist_Association_1829