METHODIST ROOTS ARE DEEP
IN LEWES
GROOME CHURCH
1968
There is no place in
Delaware where Methodist roots go deeper than in Lewes.
Reverend George Whitefield
came ashore at Lewes Capes in 1739 from a wrecked ship and is said
to be the first to preach a Methodist sermon at Lewes from the porch
of a Kings Highway house that in 1968 was still standing although it
has no marker. So, Lewes, claims the first
Methodist society as the
result of Whitefield's appearance.
Whitefield was a English
Anglican cleric and was one of the founders of Methodism and the
evangelical movement. He
was born December 27, 1714, at The Bell Inn, Southgate Street,
Gloucester, England, a son
of Thomas and Elizabeth Edwards Whitefield who were the
inn keepers there in
Gloucester. He was educated at the Pembroke college and the
Oxford
University. After his
arrival in North America, he preached revivals that became known as
'The Great Awakening”.
He died in 1770, age 55, in Newburyport on the shores of the
Massachusetts Bay.
At Lewes, both Bethel and
Groome churches trace back to Whitefield. Together, they are a
single charge of the
Peninsula Methodist Conference and are assigned one minister.
Bethel
has about 540 members and
Groome has about 75.
Bethel, has a big city
church atmosphere, a large stone building, church school and
fellowship
hall. Groome, a small
frame building, with steeple or 'bell tower', at Savannah Road and
Dewey Avenue, has the
country church atmosphere.
Now, remember Ebenezer
Church. In 1790, Francis Asbury noted in a journal of his on
October 30, “ we have a
chapel at Lewistown”. That was Ebenezer, the predeceser of Bethel
and Groome. Records show
that Ebenezer was built on the N.W. Side of South Street in
Lewistown, near the S.W.end
thereof wherethe main branch of Canary Creek crosses South
Street. An old cemetery
remains at this location today. Ebenezer was relocated south and
west
of Lewes on a country road,
now Cedar Grove Road. The first Ebenezer built in 1788 burned .
The first Bethel Church sat
at Third and Market, built about 1790 and was abandoned when
a larger structure was
built at Mulberry and Church Streets and remained in service until
1911
when the present Bethel,
with it's Gotic tower, was ready. The Mulberry Street building
was
sold to the Graves family
for use as a garment factory and is today an apartment building.
Groome Church took it's
name from the donor of the lot the church now sits upon,
Mts Ann E. Groome. The
frame building dates back to 1907
Behel Church shares
fellowship with the community, allowing a skateing rink at the
fellowship
hall three nights a week.
It is also home to a 60 member Boy Scout Troop and a 40 member
Girl Scout Troop.
Source: Wilmington News
Journal, 5 October 1968: Eileen C. Spraker Article.
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