Lexington Presbyterian Church
Upper Georgia's Oldest Presbyterian Church
One
of Georgia's most historic land-marks is the old Presbyterian
Church at Lexington, in the sacred precincts of which repose
two illustrious Georgians: George R. Gilmer and Stephen Upson.
It was organized in 1785, two years after the Revolution, by
a noted pioneer evangelist, the Reverend John Newton; and, unless
an exception be made of the Independeny Presbyterian church,
of Savannah -- never in organic connection with other religious
bodies of this faith -- it is probably the oldest Presbyterian
church in the Synod of Georgia. At Darien there was a church
prior to this time; but it suffered complete extinction during
the Spanish wars. At Midway there was a center of Presbyterianism,
but the church at this place was organized upon Congregational
lines.
Mr. Newton, who was the first Presbyterian minister to preach
the gospel on the frontier belt of Georgia, served the church
as pastor for twelve years. When he died, in 1797, he was buried
in the old church-yard; but, one hundred years later, in 1897,
his body was taken up and re-interred in the Presbyterian cemetery,
at Lexington. Mr. George C. Smith, the present clerk of the
session, assisted Mr. Newton's grandson in accomplishing this
removal.
The original agreement between pastor and people, executer in 1785 when Mr. Newton first took charge, is still in the possession of the church. The munificient salary which the pastor was to receive, according to the terms of this contract, was fixed at fifty pounds and twenty shillings per annumn. Mr. Smith is the custodian of a precious keep-sake in the nature of a little book, containing the texts from which this pioneer divine preached while pastor of Beth-salem church, from 1785 to 1787; and he also treasures a record of baptisms, to which great value attaches. Both of these genuine relics of the early days of Presbyterianism in Upper Georgia were sent, through Mrs. C. A. Rowland, of Athens, to the Jamestown Centennial Exposition, where they attracted much attention.
It was at Lexington, in 1828, that the Presbyterian Theological
Seminary, now located at Columbia, S. C., was first established,
and the house in which this famous school of the prophets was
organized was still standing in 1912 -- after the lapse of eighty-four
years.
There will be found elsewhere in this work a statement to the effect that the first Presbyterian minister ordained in Georgia was the Reverend John Springer, whose ordination occurred in Wilkes, under the famous poplar. The apparent contradiction may be easily explained. Mr. Newton preceded the latter into Georgia by at least six years; but he was already an ordained minister when he entered the State, while Mr. Springer was not until the dramatic scene in which he figured in 1791 occurred.
From Georgia's Landmarks, Memorials and Legends, Vol. I, by Lucian Lamar Knight, The Byrd Printing Company, Atlanta, Georgia, 1913