| M.E. Historic
Church in Placerville
The Past
During the Gold Rush years, among
the miners there were preachers. A Methodist, the Reverend
Hosford, preached in Hangtown in 1848. After Reverend Joseph
Meek organized Methodist churches in Coloma and Hangtown,
Reverend Bateman began a building program in 1851. A great
debt is owed to a layman, Frank Goyan, Sr., who donated five
acres of land for a church and cemetery. The Reverend
traveled to San Francisco to purchase finished siding that
was brought around the Horn from the East coast. Beams and
studs were hand adzed from local timber ... and so the
little church was built and dedicated.
It served the community well for
10 years, sitting up on the hill, escaping the fires that
were so devastating to the town. The church was a beacon of
hope to the early settlers through the fires, epidemics, and
other difficult and challenging times.
In 1852, John H. Clark of
Cincinnati, Ohio and a neighbor organized an overland
expedition to Sacramento. John Clark's diary tells of their
arrival in Placerville on September 1, 1852, putting up at
the Ohio House. He was surprised at the size of the town
"full of life, full of people, full of business." After
fulfilling his contract to deliver his passengers to
Sacramento, he returned to Placerville, helping to rebuild
the town after the 1856 fire. He had little luck in mining
and returned to Ohio in 1857. They moved later to Kansas and
his grandson presented his papers to the Historical Society.
Among his photographs is one of the church on the hillside.
In
1861, as the community had grown, so rapidly, a large brick
church replaced the small structure which was sold. The new
owner built a one-story stone foundation on Cedar Ravine and
slid the building down the hill onto this foundation. It was
used as living quarters.
In the late 1920's Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Schaeppi, semi-retired and devoted to the work of
the church, purchased the building and returned it to the
original owner, now Federated Church. With donated labor and
material, it was completely refinished and served as
classrooms, office, Pastor's study and Youth Center.
In 1953 the current Federated
Church building was dedicated on the hilltop next to the
cemetery. The older buildings on Main Street and Cedar
Ravine continued to be used until 1957 when the buildings
were sold to provide funds for an Education building. By
this time, the origin of the second story of the small
building had been forgotten.
From the Mountain Democrat,
Thursday, July 7, 1961
"....Sam Evans, meanwhile, had
commenced the destruction of the two-story building next
door...." (to the brick church) " ....After removing all
the interior partitions, Evans started taking down the
siding on the exterior of the walls. He suddenly came
upon a startling discovery--there was a separate small
building inside the one he was tearing down! A little
more investigation determined the origin of the
structure....it was the original wooden Methodist
church, built in Hangtown in 1851."
Mr. John Hassler, church member
and president of the El Dorado County Historical Society,
spearheaded the effort to save the building. It was taken
apart, each piece marked, and rebuilt on its current site,
next to the old cemetery. Many of the hand-hewn beams are
from the original church. With funds donated by the
Methodist Shrines Commission, a fireplace was added using
bricks from the 1861 brick church. At the dedication of the
building in 1961, plaques were placed to mark the event by
the County Chamber of Commerce and Marguerite Parlor #12,
Native Daughters of the Golden West, and by Dr. Frank
Gerbode, member of a pioneer family. Dr. Gerbode, born and
raised in Placerville, assisted with funds as well as
finding the bell which was believed to have been used in the
original rustic church, a ship's bell from the sailing ship
Staffordshire. In 1976 the El Dorado County Historical
Society presented the building to Federated Church. It was
named the Gerbode Memorial Church.
The building had no interior
walls, and over the years it suffered from insect and water
damage. The Historical Committee of Federated Church had
wanted for years to improve the appearance of the
deteriorating building, and finally brought the project to
completion.
The Present
With
the assistance of Denis Witcher of the County Historical
Museum and a work crew from Federated Church and friends,
they restored the building to its appearance in John Claik's
photos, found in the Root Collection of the Kansas State
Historical Society archives. Changes had to be made to
satisfy current building codes, but restored the look and
feel of the original church as much as possible. Many of the
hand-hewn beams remain and are visible inside the church.
The building has served the church
and the community well, as a small chapel, meeting and
classroom space, and as an historical stop on the tourist
trail in Placerville.
___________________________
Source:
El Dorado County Federated Church
1031 Thompson Way, Placerville, CA and The Office of El
Dorado County
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