Details for Earle's Chapel Methodist Church

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5073006763

Data

Marker Number 6763
Atlas Number 5073006763
Marker Title Earle's Chapel Methodist Church
Index Entry Earle's Chapel Methodist Church
Address
City Jacksonville
County Cherokee
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 278563
UTM Northing 3535441
Subject Codes Methodist (Methodist Episcopal and United Methodist) denomination; churches
Marker Year 1990
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 4 miles west of Jacksonville off US 79 on CR 3128
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Settlement of the Earle's Chapel community began several years before the organization of Cherokee County. W. J. Ragsdale (1811-1884), a veteran of the Texas War for Independence, and his wife Patsy McAdams (1816-1898) had settled on Prairie Branch (Mill Creek) in 1838. Elijah Earle (1804-1880), his wife Nancy Blanchett (1811-1852) and their children migrated here from Alabama in early 1846. They cleared a farm and Elijah built a mill on Prairie Branch. As the community grew, Elijah Earle and his second wife, Mary Elizabeth Jarratt Tatum (1824-1904), saw the need for a school and church. They donated four acres of land, and in 1859 a log building was erected at this site. It burned in 1875 and was immediately rebuilt. That same year, the Earle's Chapel Society, with twenty-five charter members, was officially organized by the Rev. E. P. Rogers of the East Texas Conference of the Methodist Church. A new church building was constructed in 1889 by church members T. J. Skeleton and Robert Tatum. Although damaged in a 1987 tornado, the building was restored, and after more than a century of service continues to serve the community, including descendants of pioneer families.

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