REHOBOTH BEACH HISTORY
REHOBOTH PRESBYTERIAN OF
MIDWAY
The church by the side of
the road, convenient stopping off place along the Lewes to
Rehoboth road. It's a town and country church serving a year round
parishioners and
open to visitors year in
and year out.
The church was founded by
Presbyterians of the Lewes area where Presbyterians established
a congregation in 1691 and
1692 and for many years was a ' mission' for the Lewes
Presbyterian Church
congregation , however, the Midway congregation considers
itself
the 'mother' of
Westminister Presbyterian Church of Rehoboth. In 1925 the Midway
church held services summertime in a Rehoboth theater and from
that came Westminster Presbyterian Church, with a full time year
round service.
Lewes Presbyterian was
alive in 1692. Midway Presbyterian built it's first wood
framed
church in 1855 with
remodeling done several times. The pine pews now in the brick church
were built in 1961 by John
Freeman and his son Jack. You can remember John Freeman as the
father of Ted Freeman, astronaut, killed in a plane crash .
A 1970 homecoming held
October 4. Services September Sunday the 6th, held
100 or so
worshipers, many summer
visitors. The sermon being “Whistling While You Work “ calling
for volunteer's with an
attitude of joy.
Midway church is small,
seats for 200, has a membership of 150 between ages 25 to 55
and older. The Church yard cemetery has graves dated back to
1871 and is near full of Thompson's, Fletchers, Wilson, Lynch,
Reed, and Dodd's.
Even if it is small and
old, Midway keeps pace with times, has three youth groups, and
is ahead of more urban
congregation is some ways.
In September 1970 the
Rev. S. Royden Piper was Midway's pastor.
Abstract: Wilmington
News Journal, Eileen C Spraker, Religion Editor, Saturday,
September 12, 1970.
For post in www.delmarhistory.blogspot.com
and Facebook.
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