Inscription
Reverend Sylvester Cochrane, a Congregational minister from Vermont, first conceived of a settlement in Michigan after a visit here in 1835. Returning home he formed a group called the Union Colony, which settled in Vermontville the next year. The colonists were religiously oriented, and one of their stated purposes in settling here was to “remove the moral darkness” which they thought pervaded the West.
Church services were first held in a log cabin and later in the academy across the street. The present church was dedicated in 1864. The building strongly resembles certain New England meetinghouses of the late eighteenth century, especially in its roof framing of roughly hewn timbers and in much of the interior woodwork.
Location
Sources
More markers in Eaton
Gresham United Methodist Church
Charlotte, MI
Members of the Gresham United Methodist Church first worshipped in a school and in homes.
Bellevue Gothic Mill
Bellevue, MI
Horatio Hall built this mill for Manlius Mann in 1854.
The Potterville United Methodist Church
Potterville, MI
The Potterville United Methodist Church was organized after the Reverend Hiram Nichols held a revival meeting in Potterville in 1867.
Governor Frank D. Fitzgerald Home
Grand Ledge, MI
Here lived Frank D. Fitzgerald who served his first term as governor 1935-1936.
First Congregational Church of Charlotte
Charlotte, MI
This handsome brick church was completed in 1881.
