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How
We Got Started - What Were
We Doing 100 Years Ago?
Our Pastors - Our
Church Buildings - Music History
- Stained-Glass
Windows
The First Baptist Church
of Tulare was organized June 25, 1887, with Rev. Ambrose W. Webb
as the first Pastor. Accompanied by his wife and two small
children, he came from Nebraska and was sent to this busy little
railroad town by the Baptist Home Mission Society to start a church.
Rev. Webb was zealous and determined. On Sunday, June 25,
a group assembled for worship and considered the possibility of
organizing a Baptist Church. Three years later the property
on the northwest corner of King and M streets, where Gordon's Appliance
store now stands, was purchased and plans for the building of the
church began to form. The work on the church building "proceeded
apace" through the long hot summer. The pastor labored tirelessly
and in October contracted pneumonia and died at the age of thirty
three such that the building was first publicly used for the funeral
service of Brother Ambrose Webb. The missionary phase of the
early church should not be overlooked, as the members worked among
the large group of Chinese in Tulare and Mission out stations were
also maintained around several sites in Tulare County by our fellowship.
Suddenly this small church
with Sunday School, Young People's Union, parsonage and organ were
caught in tough financial hard times of the community. The
Southern Pacific had extended the line and the railroad shop had
been moved to Bakersfield. Many houses were moved away, church membership
decreased to 44 souls and the future of Tulare looked dark. The
church could scarcely pay a minister even the small salary prevailing
then of $40.00 per month and parsonage. Hard times continued
but by the turn of the century, things were beginning to turn around.
When Rev. Jesse Green resigned in 1900 he had held the pastorate
for the longest tenure to date, for a total of four years, as there
had been five other pastors called to our fellowship from 1891 to
1896.
Twenty-five years after
our church had it's beginning, it seems the members were standing
at the crossroads of making new decisions - a larger church, a new
pastor, new benches and so on. The church prospered spiritually
and financially and it was necessary to enlarge their place of worship.
With a membership of 160 the trustees were instructed in 1914 to
consider building a new church and to work to that end. Then
came World War I but even with young men leaving for war the membership
continued to increase and by 1918 had grown to replace the older
wood frame house of worship. Work began on the second church
building in May 1918 and continued for five months. Church
meetings were held in a tent during that summer until the basement
was completed. Te dedication of the new brick church was held on
September 29. 1918. The Governor of California, William Stephens,
delivered one of the addresses and dedicated the stain glass windows
in honor of the servicemen of WWI.
Later on the nation entered
the Great Depression and funds to carry on the work of the church
became a problem. The Ladies Missionary Society even pledged
the support of $100 to help relieve the debt of the church, to be
raised by a Swiss Steak Dinner in 1934. With the approach of WWII
many members joined the ranks and men of uniform were seen in every
church service, for an air cadet flying school, Rankin Academy,
was nearby and the churches and homes of the community were opened
to them. Air Cadet Leo Schlagel who attended our church, later
served as a Baptist Missionary in Anchorage, Alaska.
It was in 1951 that the
church looked ahead and purchased two acres of land at Cross and
Cherry. In this decade the church hired its first Director
of Christian Education, added choirs, an active Youth Group, the
Men's Fellowship and other outreach and spiritual group programs.
During the 1950's the church continued to grow in membership and
Sunday School such that there clearly was a need for a new and larger
building. The actual work on the new facility at Cross and
Cherry started November 15, 1962. With volunteers largely
responsible, the day of rejoicing was May 3, 1964, when the third
edifice for Tulare First Baptist Church was dedicated. The
building included a Fellowship Hall with seating for 400 (to be
used temporality for worship services), plus offices and an 11-room
educational unit including a well-equipped nursery. In 1974,
the Fellowship Hall was remodeled to be the Sanctuary with carpeting,
wood-paneling and comfortable pews.
The decade of the 80's saw
our church involved in other growing church programs such as Home
Bible Studies and the formation of our own child care center, called
Wee Care Day Care, of which both continue today as vital ministries.
These years also saw three members of our church enter the Mission
field, which is such an integral part of Baptist history.
As our church continued to bear fruit by meeting the spiritual needs
of our community, we found the need to build again. In 1985
the church voted to have the Building Committee begin fund raising
to expand our facilities into a new sanctuary and to remodel the
present building into the family center and recreation area it was
originally designed to be. It was with the hard work and dedication
and many volunteers that those plans culminated on Easter Sunday,
1991 with the groundbreaking for our current Worship Center. Our
church family was provided all the necessary resources to make possible
the moving into the new Worship Center on Sunday, February 28, 1993.
One of the unique aspects of this new building are the beautiful
stained glass windows, saved from our old church building demolished
almost three decades before, by some very faithful church members
for all those years. Reconstructed by craftsmen to fit the
new building this priceless glasswork originally dedicated back
in 1918 provides a link to our past. It can be seen that with
God's kind providence and the hard work and dedication of so many
of our members, that as we enter the next century we can continue
the caring in our community that has sustained us for so many years.
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