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Pleasant Hill Churches

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PLEASANT HILL CHURCHES
From the Dorchester
Pleasant Hill Centennial History Book
1981

According to Russell Freidell in his 1912-13 Saline County Sunday School Annual on file at the Saline County Museum, "Sabbath Day in 1873 in the villages of Saline County was market day, homesteaders came to town, there was horse racing, the open saloon, gambling, a wide open, rude hilarious day was the Sabbath." No doubt this rowdy picture changed as the frontier was tamed and churches were organized to take the unruly citizenry in hand. Pleasant Hill had five churches: Methodist, Episcopal, St. Michael Roman Catholic, Church of the United Brethren in Christ, Congregational and Church of Christ.

At the time the first census was taken there were still no organized churches in all of Saline County. Pioneer circuit riders and resident priests or ministers from the east visited frontier neighborhoods before regular churches were established.


METHODIST

By 1870 the county had two churches, both of them Methodist, and one of them was in Pleasant Hill. On July 6 1870 trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church paid William H. Lane $100 for lots five, six, seven and eight, block four, original town, "to be used for a place of divine worship and parsonage." These original quarters in the west part of town apparently did not suit the Methodist parishioners long, for three years later, on May of 1873, they paid to Alva Duvall's second addition, located in the northeast part of town near the mill. And according to a newspaper announcement services were being held in the "new chapel" in February of 1876.

After the county seat was moved out of Pleasant Hill in 1878, the local Methodist membership dwindled, and the Dorchester congregation and their minister, a Mr. Armstrong, decided it would be nice to have the recently built church moved to Dorchester. Pastor Armstrong was also a lawyer, and with legal backing of some sort the Dorchester congregation began to dismantle the building and had the roof, floor and one wall off and partly loaded into a wagon when a group from Pleasant Hill had an injunction imposed against them. Pleasant Hill began to reassemble their building, but the District Court at Falls City dissolved the injunction and Dorchester proceeded to take the building home with them where it became a part of the new Dorchester Methodist Church in 1880.

In the late 1990's the old church was removed to a farmstead as a new church has been built in Dorchester. The stained glass windows are now a beautiful part of the new church.

The first site of the Pleasant Hill Methodist Episcopal Church and parsonage was sold in 1883 to Annie R. Lane and today is lost in a "bean field". The second parcel of land bought by the Methodist in Pleasant Hill, where their "new chapel" was built, unbuilt, rebuilt, and unbuilt again, was sold in 1884 to E. F. Root.

Apparently there were not enough members of the congregation to rebuild and the congregation appears to have disappeared. Good Templars, who were also using the Methodist Church building, shortly found another spot in town to meet.


CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH:

Pleasant Hill first appears on the membership list of the Congregational Church Association of Nebraska in 1874. Attendance at the church was twenty five to forty members and the congregation shared their minister, B.F. Page of Dorchester, with the Congregationalists of Dorchester and Friendville (later became known as the town of Friend).

In 1875, the Rev. Page moved to Friendville where he remained until his death November 14 1878. After Page moved to Friendville, the Pleasant Hill church lost ground. They submitted no report to the Nebraska Congregational Church Association for 1875 or after, and by 1878, the minutes of the Association's annual meeting indicated the Pleasant Hill Congregation had disbanded. It is unlikely that they ever built a building of its own as less than a third of all the Congregational congregations in the entire state had a building of its own. It is possible that some of the parishioners moved their association to the Pleasant Hill Church of Christ which organized the same year that the Congregationalists disbanded. The doctrine of the two denominations is related.


CHURCH OF CHRIST

The Church of Christ in Pleasant Hill was organized in 1878 with a group of about twenty members, following the weeks of meetings conducted there by Pastor W. Sumpter.

Five of the twenty members were newly baptized, seven reclaimed, and the remainder of the number was made up of residents who had their membership with the Dorchester congregation, according to Sumpter in the November 15 1878, Christian Standard. "We hope this is the beginning of a good work at this place," wrote Sumpter. "Brother Joseph Lowe is stirring up the saloon by his temperance lectures at this place."

The history of the Church of Christ in Pleasant Hill coincides with the history of the Mount Ida Lodge 180 of the Independent Order of Good Templars (IOGT). On November 30 1881, IOGT trustees, together with the Church of Christ trustees, purchased from James K and Rebecca Lane and Eliza Brigaw the former DeSoto House Hotel building, on part of lot eight block two Hardin Duvall's addition, for $250. An 1881 Dorchester Star reported that part of the old DeSoto House Hotel would be moved near the mill for a residence and for the south part would be repaired for church and Good Templar purposes.

On one early town map the building at this location is referred to as Temperance Hall, and on another, apparently an earlier map, the building is called the Campbellite Church. The name Campbellite Church is explained by the fact that the Christian Church in the United States originated in the early 1800's from several independent movements, one of which was led by Alexander Campbell. The Christian Church and the Church of Christ (not to be confused with United Church of Christ) are both denominations of the Disciples of Christ.

Neither the Church of Christ nor the Good Templars were using the Temperance Hall by 1914 when J.C. Messler of Portland Oregon, sole trustee of the Church of Christ, sold the property to James K. Lane.


ST MICHAEL ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

On September 22 1873 Alva Duvall and the Saline County Courthouse Company sold lots one, two, three and four, block three, Alva Duvall's second addition, to a committee of the St. Michael's Roma Catholic Church for $100. The Catholic Church in Pleasant Hill existed as a mission of the Catholic Church from 1874 to 1877 according to the Catholic Directory published for those years and was attended by a Priest from Crete once a month. The following notice was published in the March 4 1876 issue of the Pleasant Hill News: "Notice is hereby given to all persons owing subscriptions to the Roman Catholic Church in Pleasant Hill, that the same must be settled by note or case before March 15 1876, or costs will be made.

St. Michael's in the northeast part of town and right across the road east of the Methodist's "new chapel" location, would appear to be the church located just south of the mill on the painting of Pleasant Hill done by Jack Tobias.

The Pleasant Hill Catholic Church was no longer a mission or any parish after 1877 and the church building, which was destroyed in a wind storm about 1880 was not replaced because "the population of the town had dwindled," wrote Sister Loretta Gosen, historian for the Lincoln Diocese, in an October 17 1880 article in the Southern Nebraska Register. In 1880 Father Francis Pold, pastor at Crete, informed Bishop Bonacum of the Lincoln Diocese, that the Lincoln Diocese still owned four lots in Pleasant Hill where the church had been located. The land transfer on this property become vague at this point, but that is not the end of the story of the St. Michaels Church.

In about 1915, Chancy Moneypenny bought a farm two and a half miles south and a quarter mile west of Pleasant Hill and used the lumber from the Catholic Church, which had blown down in Pleasant Hill to build a barn. One of the church door handles adorns an old outhouse built for the Moneypenny's in the 1930's by the WPA workers. It is not clear if the church existed in a dilapidated condition until 1915 or if the building was dismantled and the lumber stored for those 35 years.


CHURCH of the United Brethren in Christ

The denomination, which survived the longest in Pleasant Hill, was the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, also referred to as the United Brethren or UB Church. On Sept. 18 1873 United Brethren trustees purchased lots one and two, block five, Hardin Duvall's third addition from James K and Rebecca Lane for $50, we assume for building a church. According to the minutes of the Nebraska Annual Conference of the United Brethren Church for 1873, the first meeting of the United Brethren congregation at Pleasant Hill convened at ten in the mornings on October 30, 1873 at the Saline County Courthouse, Bishop J. J. Glossbrenner presided. (At this time Wilber was not the county seat of Saline County)

On June 25 1883, ten years after church trustees bought their property, they sold it to Ezra S. Abbott for $10. There followed a three year lapse and on May 6 1886, the church trustees purchased lots seven and eight, block one, Hardin Duvall's second addition, for $50. It is not known if they built a church at the first location they owned, but a church was definitely built at this new location.

Sept 22 1897 church members met at a local business place to determine if the congregation wished to build a dwelling house in Pleasant Hill to be used as a parsonage. Lots one and two, block five, Hardin Duvall's third addition, were purchased from Helen and George Hastings for $25 on Oct. 13 1897. Anyone following these transactions on the Pleasant Hill map will see that the property the church purchased for a parsonage is the same two lots they originally owned from 1873-1883.

Apparently, the parsonage wasn't such a good idea. With in seven years it was being rented out to Charles Newburn for $8 per month, and in 1921 the property was sold.

United Brethren Sunday school enrollment in May of 1913 included 43 children and adults, with an average attendance of twenty. After 1915 the Pleasant Hill Church disappeared from any listings in the United Brethren of Christ Conference minutes, although there was not mention of a merger with another congregation or disposition of the church altogether. After 1915 the church may have been an outpost preaching place rather than an organized church.

*On a personal note: William H. Rose (my great great grandfather) from his obituary of March 1941. "When a young man he became a Christian and united with the United Brethren Church. So earnest was his desire to fulfill all the obligations of the Christian faith, that he did not wait for milder weather, but with the others received the sacrament of holy baptism in winter, the ice of the mill pond at Pleasant Hill having been broken to permit this ceremony.