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First Presbyterian Church

By 1847, three churches existed in
Greenville: the Episcopal, the Baptist, and the Methodist churches and they
were all located on land donated to them by Vardry McBee. In the 1840s, a
group of women headed by Mrs. Sarah E. Stone persuaded Dr. Benjamin M. Palmer
Sr. to spend a summer in Greenville preaching and this inspired the Presbyterians
to establish a church of their own. In 1848, it was decided to organize the
church formally. Between 1849 and 1851, services were held in the Lyceum Building
of the Greenville Woman's College. Finally, on July 24, 1850, Vardry McBee
deeded to the Presbyterians some land on Richardson Street where, at that
time, Washington Street ended. A two-story church with a basement was dedicated
in June of 1851. In time, the original building was razed, and the present
building was built in 1883.
Directions:
Depart from Heritage Green Place. Turn left onto Buncombe
Street. Turn right onto Richardson Street. Go one block and the church will
be on the right on the corner of Washington St. and Richardson St.
McKoy, Henry. "Church Built
by Presbyterians in 1851." The Greenville News 26 October, 1970:
11E.
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