CAREY'S CAMP
Carey's Camp is west of
Millsboro, near the crossroads at Conaway Road and Caey's Camp
Road, the location being called Mudford in early times. This
was a revival encampment, the bush
meetings, of two groups
of Methodist Societies which were many about the peninsula.
They were the Phillips Hill and the Mission School societies.
There were no buildings at the 'bush meetings' the people slept and
ate in tents under canvas sheets held up by timber poles or wagons.
There was a strong desire
to have a church, and in 1884, a Carey family, Elijah and Levenia,
donated an acre a bit east
of Mudford and Carey's Church was begun. Progress was slow, money
was none, but in 1891 the
church was dedicated.
There was an elderly
gentleman, more than a hundred years of age, Joe Ben Husdon,
living in the 1980's who watched the construction.
Since the summer revival
meetiings were a popular event it wasen't long before a permenent
campground was built.
Forty seven small crude sheds, they called them tents, with open
fronts constructed, facing a large cross shaped tabernacle .
These early camp meetings
were evanglistic revivals and attended by thousands , the sermons
were long and had 'after service' when all the saved christians
gave witness testomoials , and last until after midnight. . A 'love
feast' early morning service was held every morning, fllowed by
more testimony, was led by a layman.. Childrens Bible School was held
in the mornings.
A social viewpoint was very
important. Transportation, the horse and buggy, posed limitations
of friends in ones social circle. To renew old friendships and
romantic relationshipa posed another atmosphere.
Abstract by Harrison H., 16
October 2017. Source is “Carey's Church and Camp” writen by
Don Ward, Berta Smith and
Niel Carey, for the March 2006 issue of “Shoreline Magazine”
of the Nabb Research Center, Salisbury.
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