Historic church tells story of slavery, triumph

Pickett Chapel United Methodist Church is believed to be the oldest African American church building in the state of Tennessee. Constructed in 1827 by enslaved people for a white congregation, the structure is now owned by descendants of the tradesmen whose fingerprints can still be seen in the brick façade.

(start video)

Pickett Chapel is believed to be the oldest, still standing, historically black Methodist church building in Tennessee. The church was constructed in 1827 for a white congregation by enslaved Africans.

Gratia Strother: “So these are the fingerprints of an enslaved person who formed this brick, stacked this brick, left their fingerprints. The people who ultimately bought Pickett Chapel, bought the building, I believe were buying a building they built and their ancestors built so that they could worship on their own. And they very likely, the people who built this building, worshipped inside this building in the balcony as their slaveholders sat on the main floor and were members of the church. Those fingerprints, they tell a story. They tell a story of bondage and they tell a story of freedom.”

The Rev. Erin Beasley: “We often talk about what happened, but here you can see what happened and you can actually touch what happened. And I think that’s why it's so important for everyone to make a pilgrimage and take this opportunity to touch the brick themselves.”

(end video *)

*This video is an excerpt from a longer video about Pickett Chapel.
https://www.resourceumc.org/en/content/pickett-chapel-steeped-in-history

Pickett Chapel was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. In 2007, the Wilson County Black History Committee purchased the Chapel and began restoration efforts with funding from the Tennessee Historical Commission. The committee hopes to one day house a permanent museum at Pickett Chapel. Visit the Pickett Chapel website for updates.

Sign up for our newsletter!

Subscribe Now
Church History
A 1961 map shows the location of churches and the borders of episcopal areas within the Central Jurisdiction, which the Methodist Church established to segregate Black members from the wider church. The union that formed The United Methodist Church in 1968 dissolved the Central Jurisdiction. During the Council of Bishops spring meeting in Jacksonville, Fla., bishops explored the legacy of the Central Jurisdiction as denominational leaders consider changes to the geographic jurisdictional system. Image courtesy of Archives and History.

Lessons from past shape jurisdictions’ future

United Methodist bishops learned more about the legacy of the segregated Central Jurisdiction and history of the jurisdictional system, as leaders contemplate possible changes to that system.
Worship
The Rev. Cynthia Wilson (center, front) sings with choir members during a performance of “Gospel Mass” at the Shifting the Atmosphere conference May 2 at Hamilton Park United Methodist Church in Dallas. The Junius B. Dotson Institute for Worship and Music in the Black Church and Beyond, which is led by Wilson, partnered with The United Methodist Church’s Strengthening the Black Church for the 21st Century for this year’s event. Photo by John W. Coleman, UM News.

Black church leaders learn worship wisdom at institute

Junius B. Dotson Institute for Worship and Music in the Black Church and Beyond and SBC21 team up for “Shifting the Atmosphere” conference.
Church History
The Methodist Church’s 1956 General Conference meets from April 25 to May 7 in the municipal auditorium in Minneapolis. On May 4, the first Friday of the legislative assembly, the delegates voted to make women eligible for full clergy rights. “Now it is up to us to prove in clear and deep witness to the whole church our consecration and our loyal devotion to the work of the Kingdom of God,” said Margaret Henrichsen, a General Conference visitor, after the vote. In 1967, she became the first U.S. woman appointed district superintendent. Photo courtesy of Archives and History.

Why the 1956 women-clergy vote matters

Seventy years ago, the Methodist Church supported full conference membership for women clergy — a decision that would have a resounding impact when The United Methodist Church formed in 1968 and even today.

United Methodist Communications is an agency of The United Methodist Church

©2026 United Methodist Communications. All Rights Reserved