|
Introduction | Agency History | Order of Microfilming
Introduction
The records of the Broad Street United Methodist Church, Columbus, Ohio were transferred for microfilming to the Center for
Archival Collections, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio with the cooperation of Pastor David W. Meredith
and the assistance of James Read Barbee, Church Historian.
The Center for Archival Collections is the publisher of this microfilm edition. The camera negative is the property of the
Center for Archival Collections. For restrictions on the duplication of this collection please see the accompanying Note to
Researchers.
This collection consists of three (3) Wesley Chapel Methodist Episcopal record books (c.1867 - 1887); one (1) Central Methodist
Episcopal record book (c.1921-1935); 16 Broad Street United Methodist Church record books (c.1875 -2006) and ten (10) certificate
of transfer/membership stub booklets (1952 - 1998). The record books contain probationer's records, membership records, pastoral
records, class records, births/baptisms, marriages, deaths/removals, and historical records.
This introduction was prepared by Kathy Gardner in December 2007.
Agency History
The Early History
Broad Street United Methodist Church was organized in 1875 as the Broad Street Methodist Episcopal (M. E.) Church. The new
church had its beginnings in the Wesley Chapel M. E. Church, then standing on the west side of High Street between Gay and
Long Streets. In September, 1874, at the Fourth Quarterly Conference (now called the Charge or Church Conference) of Wesley
Chapel, a Board of Trustees was elected and charged with the "...organization of a society and the location of a church".
The present site was selected as a location that would be advantageous for many years to come.
The first building was a 40 feet by 70 feet, three-room, white frame structure facing Washington Avenue. The first services
were held on July 18, 1875. Included in the 265 members listed in "full connection" were 90 persons who had been members at
Wesley Chapel. The founding fathers had always envisioned a large church facing Broad Street, so, even though the original
building faced Washington Avenue, it was named the Broad Street Methodist Episcopal Church. By 1883, the church had begun
to outgrow the original building and began planning for a new structure.
About the Building
Joseph Warren Yost, a well-known Columbus architect, was chosen to develop plans for a structure that would accommodate the
growing congregation for decades to come. Yost chose the Akron Plan for the interior of the new building. This design was
consistent with the Protestant emphases of the late 19th century - Strong Proclamation or Preaching and the rise of the Sunday
School Movement. The Akron Plan features an auditorium style sanctuary with a sloping floor. This provided good sight lines
and brought the congregation closer to the speaker. The Akron Plan also featured two levels of classrooms arranged roughly
in a semi-circle around a Sunday School auditorium. Folding doors allowed each classroom to participate in "opening exercises,"
then close the doors for class time.
For the exterior, Yost chose the High Victorian Gothic style - a style widely employed for churches and other public buildings
in the 1870's and 1880's. Elements of this style which can be seen in the present structure are the use of polychromatic masonry
materials with contrasting textures, pointed-arch bays, asymmetric massing, and complex gable roofs with gablets, dormers,
and towers. The distinguishing feature of the exterior is the use of green serpentine stone as the facing on the brick walls.
Columbus limestone was used in the base course and steps, and Berea sandstone was used in the five lower courses of the walls
and as trim around the windows and doors.
Ground was broken for the new building in April, 1884. Services were held in the new chapel on Easter Sunday, 1885. The church
building was dedicated at a festive service in the new sanctuary on July 5, 1885, ten years to the month from the dedication
of the original building. In 1885, it was truly a "state-of-the-art" church.
Just three weeks later, on July 26, 1885, Broad Street's mother church, Wesley Church, dedicated a new church building on
the NE corner of Broad and Fourth Streets - just five blocks west. This building replaced the original one which had burned
in May 1884. Wesley Chapel, which had merged with Third Street M. E. Church in 1913 and was renamed Central Methodist Episcopal
Church, closed in 1935 and many of its members united with Broad Street Church.
The art glass windows in the west wall of the Broad Street sanctuary were originally in Central Church. These panels were
reconfigured and installed at Broad Street in 1936 thus perpetuating the heritage of the Wesley Chapel, Third Street and Central
congregations. The art glass windows in the east wall of the sanctuary were designed and installed in 1908 by the Von Gerichten
Studios of Columbus. These windows are a memorial to Mrs. David S. (Eugenia) Gray, a member of one of Broad Street's founding
families. There are also other art glass windows which are original to the building.
The pipe organ, a Felgemaker, was originally installed in 1906. It was expanded and rebuilt to the present configuration of
four manuals and 56 ranks by the Bunn=Minnick Company of Columbus in 1981.
The Church In Mission
Across the years, Broad Street Church has served statesmen and common folk alike. Joseph Foraker, William McKinley and their
families worshipped at Broad Street while they were governors of Ohio. A memorial service for President McKinley was held
at Broad Street Church concurrently with his funeral service in Canton, Ohio, on September 19, 1901. Primarily because of
this connection with McKinley, the building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Throughout its history, Broad Street Church has ministered to its community - a community that has changed dramatically from
a semi-rural neighborhood at its beginning, to the stately mansions of the exclusive residential community along Broad, Town
and Long streets during the gay nineties, to the present mix of commercial, cultural and educational institutions that today
comprise the Discovery District of Columbus.
As a part of its mission to the community, the church has provided cutting edge ministries during each of those eras - adding
a gymnasium and recreation hall for community activities in 1914; summer camps and vacation church school in the next few
years; USO style canteens for servicemen during both World Wars and the Korean War; tutoring and mentoring for students and
nurturing classes for neighborhood mothers and families in the 1950s.
Broad Street Church continues to be active within the community. Email us at bsumc@juno.com to learn more about services that
Broad Street UMC provides for the community or to learn how you can volunteer your time to support these activities. James
Read Barbee, Broad Street UMC Church Historian
The above history was copied from the Broad Street United Methodist Church, Columbus, Ohio website ( www.broadstreetumc.net).
Order of Microfilming
Roll 1
- Wesley Chapel M. E. Record Book, c. 1867 - 1873
- Wesley Chapel M. E. Record Book, c. 1871 - 1878
- Wesley Chapel M. E. Record Book, c. 1871 - 1887
- Central M. E. Record Book, c. 1921 - 1935
- Broad Street M. E. Record Book, c. 1875 - 1880
- Broad Street M. E. Record Book, c. 1890 - 1898
Roll 2
- Broad Street M. E. Record Book, c. 1900 - 1913
- Broad Street M. E. Record Book, c. 1910 - 1926
- Broad Street M. E. Record Book (closed), c. 1911 - 1927
- Broad Street M. E. Membership Roll (A-G), c. 1914 - 1925
Roll 3
- Broad Street M. E. Membership Roll (H-O), c. 1914 - 1925
- Broad Street M. E. Membership Roll (P-Z), c. 1914 - 1925
- Broad Street M. E. Record Book, c. 1923 - 1949
- Broad Street Methodist Baptismal Record, c. 1951 - 1953
- Broad Street Methodist Baptismal Record, c. 1953 - 1969
- Broad Street Methodist Membership Register, c. 1953 - 1964
- Broad Street Methodist Membership Register, c. 1958 - 1971
- Broad Street Methodist Membership Register, c. 1972 - 1991
Roll 4
- Broad Street United Methodist Family Membership Roll (Removals), c. 1970 - 1991
- Broad Street United Methodist Family Membership Roll, c. 1970 - 2006
- Certificate of Transfer Stubs, 1952 - 1953
- Certificate of Transfer Stubs, 1957 - 1958
- Certificate of Transfer Stubs, 1959 - 1960
- Certificate of Transfer Stubs, 1970 - 1972; 1984
- Certificate of Transfer Stubs, 1972 - 1976
- Certificate of Transfer Stubs, 1974 - 1984
- Certificate of Transfer Stubs, 1985 - 1989
- Certificate of Transfer Stubs, 1989 - 1998
- Certificate of Membership Stubs, 1989 - 1992
- Certificate of Membership Stubs, 1992 - 1997
United Methodist Churches | Franklin County Churches Manuscripts by Subject | Churches by Denomination | Churches by Location
|