Sinking Creek Baptist Church

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Sinking Creek Baptist Church
Location2313 Elizabethton Hwy
Johnson City, Tennessee
CountryUnited States
DenominationBaptist
AssociationsSouthern Baptist Convention
Websitesinkingcreek.org
History
Former name(s)Watauga River Church[1]
Founded1772 (1772)
Founder(s)Matthew Talbot

Sinking Creek Baptist Church is a Baptist church located in Johnson City, Tennessee. It is affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention. It is considered the oldest church in Tennessee.[2]

History[edit]

Founded in 1772 by Matthew Talbot,[3] the church was originally named Watauga River Church after a local tributary.[4] Talbot owned a large farm in the immediate area of Sycamore Shoals where the original Fort Caswell (originally named after North Carolina Governor Richard Caswell and later named Fort Watauga) was constructed on his property. Talbot also owned and operated a gristmill on located approximately one half mile from the fort on Gap Creek.

Threatened by local native Americans, the church disbanded in 1776 and reformed the following year. During the late September 1780 mustering of Overmountain Men, Talbot provide beeves and corn meal for the Overmountain Men (including three of his own family members) assembling prior to their march over the Appalachian Mountains to the October 7, 1780 Battle of Kings Mountain that occurred at present day location of Kings Mountain National Military Park near Blacksburg, South Carolina and along the North Carolina/South Carolina border.[5]

In 1783 the original building was built with pews made of flat logs. A vehicle crashed into the church in 1965 and it was rebuilt.[6]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Calloway, Brenda (1989). Jay Robert Reese (ed.). America's First Western Frontier, East Tennessee: A Story of the Early Settlers and Indians of East Tennessee (illustrated ed.). The Overmountain Press. ISBN 0932807348.
  2. ^ "Sycamore Shoals State Historic Park Announces 32nd Season of Liberty!". TN.gov Newsroom. 9 July 2010. Retrieved 16 November 2013.
  3. ^ Peters, Jackie; Dawn Peters (2012). Carter County. Images of America (illustrated ed.). Arcadia Publishing.
  4. ^ Barksdale, Kevin (2008). The lost state of Franklin: America's first secession. New directions in southern history (illustrated ed.). University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813125213.
  5. ^ Early History of Carter County 1760-1861. Frank Merritt. East Tennessee Historical Society, Knoxville, Tennessee. 1950.
  6. ^ Cochran (20 May 2004). "House Joint Resolution 1300" (PDF). Retrieved 17 November 2013.