Inscription
Founded in 1875 and named in memory of Paul Quinn, the fourth bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Quinn Chapel is the oldest black congregation in Genesee County. This building, dedicated in 1957, is the congregation’s third house of worship. A debate society organized by the young men of the church paid the debt on the first church building, erected in 1877, with admission fees earned from its Friday evening debates.
In 1912 a large brick structure replaced the original frame church. The city of Flint demolished that building in 1955 to make way for the Civic Center.
Location
Sources
More markers in Genesee
E. S. Swayze Drugstore
Otisville, MI
E. S. Swayze opened a drugstore on this site prior to 1870.
St. Paul's Episcopal Church
Flint, MI
The Reverend Daniel Brown came to this area in 1839 to help form a new Episcopal parish.
Charles W. Nash
Flint, MI
This Queen Anne-style house, built circa 1890, was owned by automotive pioneer Charles W. Nash (1864-1948).
Argentine Township Cemetery
Linden, MI
In 1838, Halsey Whitehead, a veteran of the War of 1812, buried his two-year-old daughter Rebecca here on land he settled in 1837.
Linden Mills
Linden, MI
The Linden Mills were a vital source of this village’s economic growth.
