The Old Jonesville
Campground
By Anne W. Lanningham
There is a sacred spot about two miles west
of Jonesville, the County seat of Lee, known as the
Jonesville Campground.
Here Methodist believers worshiped for almost one
hundred and sixty nine
years.
As you approach the grounds you are struck
by the unique setting, canopied by large oak trees
that have stood the
wind and storms through the years. They seem to act as
sentinels guarding
the place.
Around the grounds is a sturdy rock fence,
hand hewn of limestone. This fence was built in the
1980's long after the
founding of the church there. George Rockingham Smith,
a mason, cut the
stones, rolled them into place, and secured them
without mortar. Mr. Nathan
Cox, a faithful member supervised the building of the
fence. He was the
grandfather of one of our Historical Society members,
W. F. Cox. I can
imagine in the beginning the grounds had a rail fence
around it, as in
early days the grounds were kept closed.
As you pass through the front entrance, there
is a feeling of quietness and solemnity, only the
singing of the birds
break the silence. Perhaps if on a hot summer day you
will hear the cooing
of the doves as I remember them when living near by.
On this sacred spot, the first Church of
Methodism in Lee County was organized. It was then
known as being in the
Lee Circuit and extended into Tennessee. It had its
beginning in a log
church, which was falling into decay when it was torn
down to make room
for the present brick church, which was dedicated in
1925.
This church was built by the work and sacrifice
of the Campground members. My mother, Retta Browning
Wynn, whose indomitable
spirit with others, worked to see its completion and
dedication. Rev. D.
B. Wright was then pastor and Rev. D. A. Shugart was
the presiding elder.
The donor to the Campground property came
from Tazewell County to Lee about the time the county
was formed in 1792.
He bought land in this area in 1793 and settled on a
branch just east of
the Campground. This is known today as Wynns Branch,
its head is in Fleenor
Town. He was Elkanah Wynn, the son of William Wynne of
Tazewell, Virginia.
One would assume the church here was founded
soon after settlement was made and the log church
built. Camp meetings
began in 1810, deed to the Campground property was not
made until 1831
and was not recorded until 1833, after the death of
the donor. A brief
follows:
Deed Book 6, page 533, dated 23 July 1831,
a deed of gift from Elkanah Wynn and Mary his wife of
the county of Lee
and State of Virginia of the first part to the
trustees of the Jonesville
Campground; Robert Peery, Henry Hamblin, Isaac
Thompson, Evans Peery, Abraham
Still, Boyd Dickenson, William Wynn, Champ Hamblin,
David Orr and George
Morris trustees in trust for the use and purpose
herein mentioned all in
the County of Lee, State of Virginia of the second
part...containing three
acres and one hundred and two poles, the houses,
waterways, with free privilege
of the spring for members of the Methodist Episcopal
Church...according
to the order and discipline which from time to time
shall be agreed upon
and adopted by the ministers and preachers of the said
church of their
General Conference in the United States of America, to
preach and expound
God's Holy Word...as long as it is continued a place
of worship by the
Methodist Episcopal Church.
Signed: Elkanah
Wynn (Seal) and Mary Wynn (her mark)
Witnesses: Justice
Peace, John Fulkerson, Evans Peery
Camp meeting has been held here in August
every year since 1810, except during the years of the
War Between the States
in 1863 and 1864. The Union soldiers were then
encamped at Cumberland Gap,
Tennessee, and the members did not feel safe to
assemble here. So they
met at the Long Hollow Church, about four miles east
of Jonesville. This
old church is still standing. It is the first church
built by the Christian
Church faith in Lee County.
The tabernacle or shed as it is called was
built in 1824. Up until that time the people
worshipped under a crude brush
arbor, which protected them from the sun but not from
the inclement weather.
Judge James Wesley Orr, a Confederate veteran
and former clerk and judge of the Lee County Court, in
his history of the
Campground described the building of the shed. "In the
year 1824 a permanent
shed was built in the center of the grounds and
covered with old clap boards
and seated with split logs...The large posts, plates
and rafters of this
structure were hewn of logs. Henry Woodard and David
Orr did the scoring
and Robert Wynn and Joseph Haskew, the pastor, did the
hewing. This shed
still stands and if properly cared for and preserved
will stand for years
to come as a lasting monument to the memory of those
servants of God.
"When D. V. York was pastor of the Jonesville
Circuit from 1893 to 1896 he extended the old shed
about twenty feet on
the southwest end which gave added seating space. The
choir, ministers
and others are seated here."
Judge Orr continues with his history: "The
first presiding Elder whom I remember was Thomas
Poteet, a one-eyed Irishman.
I have heard four Bishops preach at the Campground,
two of whom were Bishops
and two who became Bishops afterwards. These were
Bishops Atkins, Waterhouse,
Duncan and Dubose. I remember when attendance at
Campmeeting was four or
five thousand people, many coming for miles. Great has
been the work done
here for spreading the gospel and the upbuilding of
the Christian Kingdom
on Earth.
"The number of camps before the war were
thirty or forty arranged around inside the fence in a
hollow square and
were of log construction. In the time of the War
Between the States the
64th Virginia Regiment, C. S. A. camped here in these
camps. When leaving
some forgot to put out their fires, which broke out
and destroyed the camps.
The shed only was saved." After the war the camps were
rebuilt of weather
boarding all joined together in a hollow square. These
were used for many
years until progress, better roads and automobiles
came. Modes of travel
became easier; time and the weather took their toll
and the camps were
torn away.
Early Campground minutes kept by Rev. William
W. Woodward, who lived on Sugar Run, gives the names
of the first presiding
Elder, the ministers, leaders and campers at the
Campground. Elbert Sevier
was presiding Elder when the shed was built. Pastors
given were Thomas
Nixon, James Witten, David Cummings, Abraham Murphy,
Abraham Still, Branch
Merriman and Joseph Haskew.
Abraham Still once pastor at the Campground
was both a preacher and doctor. He came from Tazewell,
Virginia to Lee
County to pastor the church and lived near the Lee
County Natural Bridge.
Among his nine children one was destined to become
famous, Andrew Taylor
Still, born in Lee County. Dr. Abraham Still served in
different churches
and eventually was sent to a Shawnee Mission in Kansas
where he preached
and doctored the Indians. His son, Andrew Taylor
Still, studied medicine
and became a doctor. Later he discovered the science
of Osteopathy and
in 1892 founded a school of Osteopathy in Kirksville,
Missouri.
Other members at the Campground were Henry
Thompson, Drury Fletcher, Robert Ely, John Russell,
Job Crabtree, Noble
Covey, Thomas Blakemore, Champ Hamblin, Elkanah Wynn,
David Ely, Robert
W. Wynn, Nicholas Speak, John Burgan, Henry Woodward,
Nathaniel Muncy,
Nathan Hobbs, Valentine Woodward and John Miles. Other
early campers not
named above were Boyd Dickenson, Jessee Woodward,
Joseph A. Blakemore.
David Orr (father of Judge Orr), Alexander Orr, John
Hamblin, William Marshall,
Matthew Warren, Willis Kirk, Ailsey Wynn, Joseph Ely,
colored, and Henry
Goins, colored.
The last families to camp here were the Cox's,
Wagals, Penningtons, Spurriers, Poteets, Elys,
Woodwards, Flanarys, Rosenbaums,
Hyatts, Yearys, and others perhaps not remembered.
There was always a camp
provided for the ministers.
Knowing the country and where many of these
people lived; it seems incredible that they traveled
so far. Up until 1830
man could not travel faster than by horse. Yet they
came by wagon covered
or not, by oxcart, horseback or walked over rough and
dusty roads.
Besides the campers who came and stayed for
the duration of the meeting many came from all over
the county and from
other sections even from Tennessee and Kentucky. They
had great crowds
on Saturday and especially on Sundays. They came with
baskets and trunks
of food for their families, relatives, friends and
even strangers. Country
ham, chicken, beef and mutton with all kinds of cakes
and pies all spread
on a cloth on the ground, enough and more for
everyone.
Dr. John C. Orr in his early recollections
of the campmeetings wrote: "It was one of the
religious events of the year,
to which all, both saint and sinner looker forward to
with equal interest.
People made plans, all matters on the farm were so
arranged that the whole
family could go away for a week or two. The social
life at the meeting
was hardly less valuable than the religious value. The
reunion of friends
and families and acquaintances, reacted upon the
religious experience deepening
both love for God and fellow man."
The early promoters of the Campground Church
believed as did the great founder of Methodism, John
Wesley, and tried
to live according to the method laid down in the Holy
Scriptures as best
they could. Broad as this definition seems, it gives a
foundation and organized
system of faith, doctrine, and conduct the success of
which is one of the
most notable int he religious annals of the world.
When John Wesley decided
to give himself to the church work, he wrote that
famous phrase: "Leisure
and I have taken leave of each other." Many of us
today tend to take the
opposite course. He certainly proved this decision
true as his Journal
gives the most amazing record of human exertion penned
by man. His methodical
life can be exemplary for us today.
Charles Wesley, brother of John, was associated
with him in religious work, wrote about 6,000 Hymns.
Many are in the Methodist
Hymnal and other song books and many of them have been
sung at the Jonesville
Camp Meetings until the rafters rang with shouting and
praise to the Lord.
Francis Asbury was converted in England under John
Wesley. He came to America
as a missionary. His leadership in the church was
outstanding; which led
to his being made the first Bishop in the Methodist
Church. He was ordained
Bishop at the famous Christmas Conference in the
Lovely Lane Meeting House
in Baltimore, Maryland. This is known as the Mother
Church of Methodism
in America.
Few know that Bishop Asbury traveled on his
preaching missions to the southwest Virginia counties.
He preached at the
Jonesville Campground and went all the way to
Cumberland Gap, preaching
and teaching. Bishop Asbury was called, "The Prophet
of the Long Road."
He was one of the greatest leaders of Methodism in
America. He was never
married, he never had a home, his home was on the back
of tired horses
and his bride was the open road. On his preaching
missions he traveled
275,000 miles, crossed uncharted Appalachians; in rain
and sleet, in snow
and high waters. He died by the side of the road he
traveled near Fredericksburg,
Virginia in 1816 at the age of three score and ten.
Since its inception the Campground Church
has been under three branches of Methodism. First the
Methodist Episcopal,
under which it was organized, the Methodist Episcopal
Church South, and
now the United Methodist Church.
In the year of 1844 at the General Conference
in New York a heated discussion arose over slavery.
The laws of the southern
states prohibited the freeing of salves and the nation
was driving headlong
to the tragic days of the War Between the States.
After days of prayerful
and tearful discussion the plan of separation was
adopted June 7, 1844.
The next year May 1, 1845, about one hundred
delegates, duly elected by
the Annual Conference of the Southern States met in
Louisville, Kentucky.
After a thorough and prayerful consideration of all
questions involved,
on May 17, 1845, a resolution was adopted by which the
Annual Conference
of the slave holding states were constituted a
separate ecclesiastical
connection under the Plan of Separation. Thus the
Methodist Episcopal Church
South was organized.
It was then the Jonesville Campground became
a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South as
did many of the southern
churches. For about ninety-two years after the
separation a commission
worked to form a suitable plan of union. Finally in
1939 one composed of
representatives of the Methodist Episcopal Church, the
Methodist Episcopal
Church South and the Protestant Methodist Church
formulated a plan of union
which each of the churches adopted. At the General
Conference in 1939 the
three branches of the Methodist Church joined and
became the Methodist
Church. A Uniting Conference was held in 1968 in
Dallas, Texas at which
time the Evangelical United Brethren Church joined the
Methodist Church
and the name, United Methodist Church, was adopted.
"So great a crowd of witnesses," have filled
the pulpit at the Campground. Records name Richard N.
Price who authored
"The History of the Methodist church." David Sullens
who was president
and founder of Sullens College in Bristol, Virginia:
J. N. Hillman who
was president of Emory and Henry College in Emory,
Virginia; Bishops Allen
and Finger; and District Superintendents Wiley,
Patterson, Dawson, and
Ball; and in addition, through the years the Lee
County pastors have kept
the spiritual flame burning that was lit so long ago.
Several years ago a dining hall and kitchen
service were added to the grounds and the social life
and reunions of the
past are recalled. In more recent years a modern brick
parsonage was erected
on the northeast part of the grounds. The ground
breaking for the parsonage
was August 24, 1958, when Mrs. W. B. Davidson and Mrs.
Mae Wynn Gibson
turned the first shovels of dirt for the foundation.
Rev. Claude B. Quillen
was then the pastor and Rev. C. D. McHaffy was the
District Superintendent.
Rev. Jeff Calahan, a vivacious young man, is now
pastor of the Jonesville
Parish and occupies the parsonage at the Campground.
In the summer of 1978, just inside the front
entrance of the grounds, there was placed a marker
with this inscription:
"The Jonesville
Campground established in 1810 has been placed on the
National Register
of Historical Places of the United States Department
of Interior."
This marker has a unique setting, placed
on an old mill stone from the Browning-Wynn Mill. No
more fitting foundation
for the marker could have been erected than the old
grind stone that ground
the grain that contributed to the physical needs of
the people and placed
at the old Campground, where through the years it has
brought spiritual
strength to the hundreds who have worshiped there.
Anne Wynn Laningham (Mrs. James E.) The
great-great-granddaughter
of Elkanah and Mary Muncy Wynn who donated the grounds
to the Methodist
Church. When a child she became a member of that
Church.
Historical Sketches of Southwest Virginia,
published by The Historical Society of Southwest
Virginia, publication
13 - 1979, pages 20 to 25.
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