Inscription
WASHINGTON PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. The Presbyterian Church of Washington was organized in 1790, under the Presbytery of South Carolina, with the Rev. John Springer as first pastor. Services were held in private homes, in the Court House, the Academy, and in the Methodist Church, until 1825, when the first church edifice was erected.
On July 29, of that year, the lot upon which the present church building stands was conveyed by Dr. Joel Abbott to Thomas Terrell, Samuel Barnett, Andrew G. Semmes, Constantines Church and James Wingfield, Trustees of Washington Presbyterian Church. The Georgia Presbytery was organized at a meeting of the South Carolina and Georgia Synod in Washington in 1821, and in 1826 the Synod met in the new church building.
Many famous ministers have been pastors of the Washington Presbyterian Church, among them: the Rev. Alexander H. Webster, the Rev S. J. Cassels, the Rev. Francis R. Goulding, the Rev John Brown, the Rev. H.W. Petrie, the Rev. Nathan Hoyt, the Rev. J. K. S. Axson, and the Rev. Thomas Dunwoody. Alexander H. Stephens and Duncan G. Campbell were lifelong members of this church, as were many other distinguished men and women.
157-21 GEORGIA HISTORICAL COMMISSION 1958
Location
Sources
More markers in Wilkes
Battle of Kettle Creek
BATTLE OF KETTLE CREEK.
Campbell Home
Washington, GA
CAMPBELL HOME. This was once the home of two distinguished Georgians - father and son.
The Cedars
Washington, GA
THE CEDARS. The high hill on which The Cedars stands was a home - site for the Indians before the arrival of white men.
Clarke's Creek Encampment
CLARKE'S CREEK ENCAMPMENT.
First Court North of Augusta
FIRST COURT NORTH OF AUGUSTA.
