Details for Bethany Baptist Church

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507013608

Data

Marker Number 13608
Atlas Number 5507013608
Marker Title Bethany Baptist Church
Index Entry Bethany Baptist Church
Address 7304 Homestead Rd
City Houston
County Harris
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 277612
UTM Northing 3301939
Subject Codes African American topics; Baptist denomination; churches
Marker Year 2006
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 7304 Homestead Rd
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Bethany Baptist Church has played an important role as a spiritual and community leader in Houston. Though having strong connections with a separate Bethany Baptist Church founded in 1922, members organized this church as Houston Garden Baptist Church in 1935. It was structured by the Rev. Thomas W. White, the Rev. W.T. Turner and the Rev. M.M. Wolf. The Rev. Oscar E. Reifel served as its first pastor. The congregation erected a sanctuary in 1936, followed by a new house of worship in 1941. The church changed it name to Bethany Baptist in 1946. Members established the church in the Houston Gardens community. The federal government helped to create the neighborhood as part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Resettlement Administration, which worked to resettle low-income rural families to urban areas. By the 1970s, demographics in the area changed from predominately Anglo American to African American. During that time, Bethany was the only one of four predominately black churches in the Union Baptist Association that began as an all-white congregation to survive the era of change without merging or facing foreclosure. Bethany Baptist Church became an example of positive, successful institutional integration when the Rev. Curley Edward Carr, an associate pastor, became the congregation’s first African American head pastor in 1971. Over the years, the Bethany Baptist congregation has experienced substantial growth and development. It continues to serve the surrounding area of northeast Houston as a spiritual, educational and community leader. (2006)

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