Showing posts with label Big Zion A.M.E. Church.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Zion A.M.E. Church.. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

The History of Big Zion A.M.E. Church by Gloria Steptoe

Rev. Solomon Johnson, Founder and Pastor of the former Mount Zion Church M.E. African was established in Roseland, LA in 1860. Solomon was born in Calvert, Maryland in 1835 and died on April 29, 1926 in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana. He is buried in Big Zion Cemetery in Roseland, Louisiana.  A freed slave was called to the ministry to preach. He was married to Margarette Cage Johnson and to this union four children were born; John, Delila, Rhody, and Anna. He served God under the the Methodist Episcopal Church, and was sent south to plant a seed church. His wife and their four children left Maryland and settled in Louisiana.  

Rev. Johnson continued to work for the church through preaching. He had a desire to give every Negro a place to worship and to serve the " Most High God". Rev. Johnson established a church around 1860, appointing trustee who were all free men. He named the church Mount Zion M.E.  African church. The African was delineate it from the White M.E. Churches. Rev. Johnson continued to preach by meeting in houses because they did not have a formal church building in which to meet. This continued for several years under he M.E. religious name. 

Although Methodist Episcopal was the religion of choice for the freemen of color. In the North it lacked true equality and religious freedom. There was much prejudice and the opportunity to preach was limited or non existent. M.E. or Methodist Episcopalism was prevalent in the deep south and was the religious worship of choice for most freemen or Negroes (as referenced by the History of A.M.E. Zion Church Vol.II) 

The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church was established in October 1796, in New York City. The organization grew out of the dissatisfaction among the people of color over the kind of treatment they received in the services of the church. People of color were not treated equally during worship, nor were they afforded equal enjoyment of religious rights and privileges. Some men of color were licensed to preach, but were not allowed to preach to their own color or anyone else. The Negro was wanted for the support that provided, but little else.

In 1776, about 30  Negroes, under James Varick's leadership withdrew from the John Street Methodist Episcopal Church, and formed the first colored church in New York was built in 1800. Both black and white could operate in Methodism, but it was limited. John Varick and a small group of friends began to meet in the home of James Varick. It was against the law for black men to hold meeting of any kind. He began the meetings, because "Caste Prejudice" had crept into the Methodism of Wesley and Coke.

In 1796, they withdrew from the church and formed what had grown into the A.M.E. Zion Church. The following group of laymen formed the Zion Methodist Church; Peter Williams, James Varick, Frances Jacob, Thomas Sipkins, George E.  Moore, George White, George Collins, Thomas Cook, William Brown, and David Bias. Peter Williams and Frances Jacob applied for and signed the Articles of Incorporation of Religious Denominations to establish the church. 

Rev, Johnson had limited resource, but he had a desire to establish a permanent home for the Mount Zion Methodist Episcopal African Church which denotes the church for the White Methodist churches. He located four acres in parcel Township 3 in St. Helena Parish, Louisiana now known as Roseland. This was convenient for Rev. Johnson and some of the trustees; Fredrick Butler, Thomas Hays, Thomas Jones, and Henry Lawson because they all lived in the Township 3 or Roseland area.

Rev. Johnson went to William W. Wood, a wealthy white land owner who owned many acres in Township 3 Roseland, LA which originally part of St. Helena Parish, Louisiana.  In 1868, Rev. Johnson met with Mr. William Wood and impressed upon him the desire that he  wanted to preach the gospel to his people, and that he would like to have a permanent building to do so. Mr. Wood was believed to the a Christian man, and who had a desire to promote the gospel to free man of color. He therefore provided four acres of land to Rev. Johnson and the trustees for the Mount Zion Church.  He donated the land with the stipulation that it be used only for a building to be erected for the worship and service to our Lord and Savior. If a church was not built it would revert back to Mr. Wood. The trustees and Rev. Johnson received the land from Mr. Wood, as an Act of Donation. The transaction was recorded in the Clerk's Courts' Office in Tangipahoa Parish on September 8, 1871.

Upon on acquiring the land, a wooden structure was built and the church had a permanent home. The congregation grew and the pastor and trustee decided to joined the A.M.E. Zion church denomination.  They joined the Louisiana conference out of New Orleans and became the "Mother Church" of the Louisiana Conference. There were two Louisiana conferences, one north and they the southern one in New Orleans, La. After the conversion from Methodist Episcopal to A.M.E. Zion had taken place, the name was changed to Big Zion A.M.E. Zion Church. With this conversion, the Big Zion Church was established at the present site; 622268 Washington Ave., in Roseland, Louisiana.

The church was erected and served dual purpose. It was used to worship and as a meeting place to educate the Negro. Community leaders organized the Big Zion School trustee board. It was their trustee board that  purchased two acres of land for the price of $184.75 to build a school so that Negroes could be educated. It was named Big Zion School after the church. 

The school existed for many years and educated many children. Miss Leona Morris who is one of Rev. Johnson's descendants was principal of the school for more the than 30 years. Many students who received their early education became doctors, lawyers, teachers, principals, entrepreneurs, social workers, engineers, and work in many other fields.

In 1970's, the church was believed to be burned by an arsonist. It was never proved and the membership became divided and decreased because they didn't have a permanent place to worship once again. Although the building was destroyed miraculously the Bible only sustained charred pages, but was still intact. This was a testament to the power of God's world to stand in all adversity.

After several years of worshipping in the old Big Zion School and other churches, in 1980 we finally began new construction of the present sanctuary.  Rev. C.O. Newton an architect by occupation was instrumental  in building the first sanctuary returned and drew the plans again for the new sanctuary. The sanctuary stands today as our present place of worship.

Many of the Rev. Johnson's descendants or members of this church as deaconesses, ministers, choir members, and officers, who continue to keep the promise of Rev. Johnson of serving the "Most High God". 


Note:

Monday, January 26, 2015

Big Zion A.M.E. Church Cornerstones

Big Zion A.M.E. Church in Roseland, LA 
In 1903, George Watson and his wife Winnie Smith Watson grant, Bargain and Sell, Assign, Convey, Set over and delivered unto Lemuel Irving, Rubin Brown, Jr., Jake Leonard, Sr., Lard and J.S. Callahan, Trustees of Big Zion School in Roseland, Louisiana.

A parcel of land comprising of six acres more or less and being all of Lot number sixty-three in plat of Roseland, Col only. Township three saith, Range from (7) east in Parish of Tangipahoa, State of Louisiana, except four (4) acres owned by Big Zion Church, the same having been acquired by this vendor from Mary E. Scott by act passed before me August 18, 1902 and recorded in the Records of Tangipahoa in Conveyance Book No 8 at the clerk's office in Amite, Louisiana.

Big Zion School was and all African American school. My mother and some of her siblings attended Big Zion. On the land sits the church, cemetery and school. I took a picture of the cornerstone and found the following;

"Big Zion A.M.E. Zion Church," Mother Zion Church in the LA. conference established 1860. The new church dedicated on March 16, 1980. Rev. C.O. Newton, M.Th, Pastor., Rev. Hollis Calahan, Pres. Elder., The Rev. Arthur Marshall, Jr.,  Bishop.



Trustees

Leona Morris, Charlie Morris, Rosetta Garrett, Alvin Deamer, Fannie Johnson, Idella Dorsby, J.C. Pikens, Robert Solomon, Rev. C. O. Newton, Wilelmina Leonard, Secretary and Willie Andrews, Chairman., Laid August 10, 1980 by M.W. Prince Hall Grand Lodge.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-y2HgMCUSck





Sunday, January 25, 2015

The History of the Irving Family of Roseland, Louisiana

Dora Curry Irving
When I was a child growing up in Amite, my mother used to take my three brothers and I to Big Zion cemetery in Roseland, Louisiana, to clean the graves of my grandparents. The two wooden building across the road from the cemetery caught my eye. All my life I wanted to know more about those two buildings.

So I decided to knock on somebody door to get some information about the two building. The door that I knocked on was a lady by the name of Sandra Watson Turner. I asked her could she tell me something about those two building. She said I grew up in the two story building and the little house next door was a packing house for produce. I felt like a kid in a toy store! I can't explain how excited I was to talk with someone who had first hand information.

The first thing she told me was about her "Papa Will." She said that her Papa Will and all his brothers were farmers. I searched for them on the census and found Wilbert, his wife and children in the 1940 United States census. Wilbert and Dora had six children; Ora Belle, Lois, Wilbert, Irene, Gloria, Leontine Irving.
Irene Irving Watson Turner

Wilbert parents Lemuel and Susie had eleven children; Wilbert, Alice, Ethel, Lucy, Alma, Ralph, Lemuel, Robert, Tom, Charles Edward & Roscoe Irving. Lemuel was born in 1854 and died on July 18, 1942 in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana. Lemuel donated the land for Big Zion A.M.E. Church in Roseland, Louisiana.

Lorriane Lizana provided information about the occupations of Lemuel and Susie McKnight Irving descendants. Alice Irving Vernon was a farmer seamstress, Wilbert Irving, Sr., a carpenter, Roscoe was a carpenter, Lucy Irving Collier was a midwife, Alma Irving Wood Perry was a farmer and school teacher.  Lemuel Irving, Jr., a farmer and  factory worker, Ralph Irving, Sr., farmer, was a school bus driver. 

Sandra went on to tell me about her Cherokee grandmother Dora. Dora was a midwife and a natural healer. I asked Sandra if she had a picture of her grandparents, she said yes. I was delighted and anticipated looking at the photograph of the woman who delivered so many baby in the area. She came back with a picture of her grandmother Dora. Sandra recalled how her grandmother Dora healed her and her sibling when they were ill. I wish that someone would have record the knowledge and information Dora knew about natural healing. Irene Irving Watson Turner is Sandra's mother.

When I got home I went straight to "Family Search" to look at the census records to search for Dora's parents. Her parents Peter and Delilia had twelve children; Franklin, Victorine, Katie, Oscar, Soloman, Joe, Samuel, Annie, Richard, Clara, Dora, and Laurence Curry.  Peter was born in Mississippi and Delilia was born in Louisiana. According to the 1900 United States census, Peter was fifty-two and Delilia was thirty-three. Dora was born in 1896 and died in August of 1981 in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana., she is buried in Big Zion Cemetery.