Historic John the Baptist Church
Posted by: hoteltwo
N 30° 24.938 W 087° 12.241
16R E 480405 N 3364859
Located at corner of East Salamanca St and North 10th Ave this early church provided services for both black and white Baptists in Pensacola.
Waymark Code: WMKCRP
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 03/21/2014
Views: 11
Marker Text:
This is the site of John the Baptist Church, one of the oldest Baptist Churches in Pensacola. In 1846 the First Baptist Colored Church of Pensacola, known today as Historic John the Baptist Church, was organized in the Seville Square community. The church served black and white Baptists until the Civil War (1861-1865). Retreating and invading armies threatened to burn Pensacola, causing all residents except 72 white and 10 black people to relocate to Alabama. During the war, African-American Baptists kept this, the only Protestant church in Pensacola open. After the war, a dispute arose between black and white Baptists regarding the church property. In 1866, black Baptists wrote a letter to the Freedmen’s Bureau explaining that the black Baptists purchased the property and “upon it erected a place of worship.” The letter also explained that the property had always been in use of the congregation and that since the war others claimed control of it. In 1870, the black congregations relocated, under the leadership of Rev. Robert Ahrens (c. 1833-1925), to this site in the Hawkshaw community. The Seville Square church housed a Freedmen’s Bureau school and the church at Hawkshaw housed a school for children and adults.
Marker Number: F-692
Date: 2010
County: Escambia
Marker Type: City
Sponsored or placed by: The Congregation of the Historic John the Baptist Church and the Florida Department of State.
Website: [Web Link]
|
Visit Instructions:
In your log, please say if you learned something new, and if you took any extra time to explore the area once you stopped at the historic marker waymark.
Please post a photo at the marker location.