In
September, 1848, occurred the first camp meeting in the County. This
was held about two miles below the depot in Patterson, on the
Northeast quarter of section 33, in Crawford Township. For many
years this place was a noted one for outdoor meetings, political as
well as religious. It was earliest known as the McGinnis and later
as the Holton place. This meeting, and other meetings later on, were
held under an immense black Walnut tree that was over six feet in
diameter, and more than one hundred feet high. The lower limbs began
about nine feet above the ground in the shade of the tree extended
about eighty feet in diameter.
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Typical
Early Day Camp Meeting |
This
camp meeting was held under the direction of the Methodists and
there were three preachers present; Rev. Ezra Rathburn, of Des
Moines, Rev. Allen, of Linn Grove, and the other one is not
remembered. People were in attendance from long distances, from
miles northwest of Winterset, and from Dallas, Polk, and Warren
counties. Probably over a thousand attended at one session or
another. It remained in session about a week and was said to have
been a successful meeting from the church standpoint. Anyhow, it
drew a great crowd of sinners; and persons of various
denominations, besides nearly the entire Methodist population
hereabouts were present. It was the second great gathering of
people in Madison County, that of July 4th that year being the
first.
So
great was the success of this meeting that the Methodists held
another in the fall of 1849 and again in 1850. People camped as a
rule in their covered wagons and most of them came on ox wagons.
Tents were very scarce in those days and none were on the grounds
at the first meeting. Grass water and fuel were abundant and, of
course, free.1 Although
the Baptists of Madison
County held the first religious meeting in the county, the
Methodists quickly became the predominant denomination and
remained so. In a census of church membership in Madison County in
1952, the top five were Methodist (2520), Christian (908),
Catholic (590), Friends (463), and Presbyterian (388). _________________
Source: 1. |
History of Madison
County and its People, Volume 1, Herman Mueller, The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1915,
Chicago, Illinois |
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