Date: Fri 12-Sep-1997
Date: Fri 12-Sep-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
church-Stepney-Baptist
Full Text:
Stepney Baptist Church Celebrates Its 150th Anniversary
(with photos)
BY KAAREN VALENTA
MONROE - Route 25 was a narrow dirt road when the Stepney Baptist Church was
built alongside it in 1841 by members of the congregation under the
supervision of Hanford Hull, a noted joiner.
Using mostly donated lumber, timber and labor, the congregation spent $1,945
to build the church. On the opposite side of the unpaved road was a tranquil
village green and, later, an identical church, built using the same plans,
which served the local Methodists.
Stepney Baptist Church was a mission church, part of the Easton Baptist
Church, a congregation that had been organized in 1831. The Easton church
quickly grew to 212 members to become the largest church of American Baptists
in Fairfield County, prompting its members to decide to build another church
in Stepney.
The Rev William Dennison served both the Easton and Stepney Baptist churches,
alternating his Sunday preaching between the two. When the congregations
officially separated on February 29, 1848, with the formation of the 53-member
Monroe Baptist Society, Rev Dennison decided he could not favor one church
over the other. He resigned from both.
In May 1848 the Stepney congregation hired its first pastor, the Rev James
Mallory, at an annual salary of $175.50. That same year they planted maple
trees and erected a white picket fence around the church property.
In the early days, most of the members of the Stepney congregation walked to
church, including one man "of saving qualities" who, weather permitting,
walked barefoot to church, putting on his shoes upon entering the
meetinghouse. Many came on horseback.
One prominent brother, rather proud and dignified, always came in a handsome
two-seater pulled by a pair of bay horses. He would spread a blanket over the
wheels so his wife and daughters could alight without soiling their silks.
Another brother, poor in worldly goods but rich in spirit, always came with
his numerous family in the farm wagon drawn by a pair of oxen.
Today nearly everyone arrives by car including the Rev William J. Minser, who
is the 40th pastor to serve the congregation in the 150 years since the Monroe
society was founded. Like many of the more than 200 members of the
congregation, he is a Newtown resident.
"About a third of the congregation lives in Newtown," Pastor Minser said, "but
members also come from Danbury, Bethel, Redding, Shelton, Southbury, Norwalk,
Bridgeport and other communities."
Today an average of 30,000 cars, trucks, motorcycles and other vehicles use
Route 25 every day, passing just a few yards from the front steps of the
church. The white fence is gone and so are most of the maples. Even the
solitary maple in front of the church is imperiled by the planned widening of
the highway. There has been some discussion about the possibility of moving
the church further back on the property.
But the congregation continues to grow and prosper. Besides the church and the
adjacent parsonage, which now serves as the church offices, the property now
includes other buildings.
Behind the church, where there were once sheds where members of the
congregation sheltered their horses, is an educational building and
auditorium, built in 1960 at a cost of $30,345. The mortgage was burned two
years later.
The building, which houses the popular Step-A-Way nursery school, was
dedicated in memory of Charles and Irma Nichols. An active member of the
congregation and a longtime employee of The Newtown Bee , Irma Nicholas, 71,
was hit by a car and killed on a winter evening in 1971 when she attempted to
cross Route 25 to her mailbox after returning home from the church's annual
meeting.
In 1991, when the Connecticut National Bank branch next door to the church
closed, the congregation bought the building with funds from the estate of the
late Beulah T. Beck and dedicated it in her memory.
Just as for its previous anniversaries, the congregation decided to begin
celebrating the 150th this fall, when the weather is good, rather than in
mid-winter. Besides, there won't be a February 29 in 1998, nor in any year
until 2004.
"There's no leap year in years divisible by 400, so there won't be one in the
year 2000," explained Newton Williams, a member of the congregation who lives
on Hattertown Road in Newtown with his wife, Connie.
Mr and Mrs Williams were married 50 years ago in the Stepney church. She was
the fourth generation of her family to be married in the church.
The Williamses were on the committee that assembled photographs and other
items for a memorabilia day, Walk Down Memory Lane, which the congregation
held recently to begin the anniversary celebration. Other members of the
committee included Dawn Barrett and Marian Wilson, both of Sandy Hook; Gene
Kaechele, Easton; Marian Fortier, a former Newtown resident who now lives in
Southbury; Grace Harper and Cora Yousko of Southbury; Helen Gottschalk of
Newtown, and committee chairperson Eleanor Lewis of Stepney.
The photos showed the changes in the church over the years. In 1947 the wood
burning stoves were removed and an oil-fired furnace was installed. The
sanctuary was completely renovated in 1950 and extensive storm damage to the
steeple was repaired.
The church's iron bell, cast in 1885 by the Jones Foundry in Troy, New York,
broke from its moorings in 1964 and fell on the rafters in the steeple. Rather
than rehanging it, the congregation decided to mount it on a memorial on the
church grounds. On the church's 125th anniversary an electronic carillon was
installed in the belfry.
From Christmas 1972 to Labor Day 1973 the Baptists shared their church with
the Methodists, who had sold their church and were in the process of building
a larger house of worship. The church "across the green" now houses Our Lady
of Rosary Chapel, a Roman Catholic church that celebrates the Latin Mass. Area
residents who immigrated from India currently use the Baptists' Beck building
to hold weekend services.
On Sunday, September 28, the Stepney congregation will hold a tree planting
ceremony.
"There will be three trees - an oak to represent God the Father, a spruce for
God the Son, and a Bradford pear to represent the Holy Spirit, Rev Minser
said.
There will be a Sunday School Rally Day with a noon potluck dinner, then on
Saturday, October 18, the congregation will hold an old-fashioned harvest fair
and flea market from 10 am to 4 pm with events from frog jumping contests to
baking competitions, watermelon spitting contests to chili and chowder
cook-offs. On Saturday, November 22, the congregation will hold a Thanksgiving
dinner/King of Kings Ball, which will include dinner, a speaker, and
entertainment including ballroom and country line dancing instruction.
"It promises to be quite a party," Rev Minser said.
