Joshua Chapel
MSA SC 5496-51538
African Methodist
Episcopal Church, 1839
Biography:
Joshua
Chapel was an African American Methodist
Episcopal Church located on
Several
African American families
settled in a village around this church. Today, a few of these houses
still
remain, though they are overgrown and dilapidated. At the intersection
of
Joshua
Chapel was founded and
accepted into the Delaware Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church
in 1839.6 At
this point, no records have been found documenting the creation of
Joshua
Chapel. The earliest record referring to the church, however, is a land
mortgage from 1869 between the Church Extension Society of the
Methodist
Episcopal Church and the church trustees: Charles W. Jones, Marshall J. Jones,
Isaac Cotton, Samuel Gleaves, Isaac S. Jones, Isaac Caulk, John Stricking,
Isaiah Caulk, and Samuel S.
Gleaves. The mortgage was for $200 with 6% interest
for one acre of land with the following bounds: “Beginning for the same
at a
stone set in the road leasing from Chestertown towards
The
Caulk and Cotton families were
integral to establishing this community and church. There is
documentation of
sketches of a church nearby a public road and Caulk family properties
as well
as a land plat that was surveyed for Joshua Cork, which includes about
twenty
acres along the Road to
At Joshua Chapel, there is a graveyard with 20-30 headstones, including members of the Cotton, Caulk, and Strycking families. Most of these headstones, however, are more recently dated to the 20th century. Located on a nearby village property are two grave markers. They are two wooden column with human heads carved on top, with the words “Father 1862-1963” and “Mother 1879-1946” inscribed on them.12 These dates are too late for “Father” and “Mother” to refer to a founder of the church, but these markers could retain some Afro-Caribbean cultural tradition and therefore indicate that even after one hundred years of settlement in Kent County, Maryland, and the black community maintained some connection with their ancestors and possible Afro-Caribbean culture.13
Joseph
Elbert was a black Methodist
Episcopal minister and served as bondsman to Isaac Cotton’s
administration bond.14
It is possible that Joseph Elbert may have served as minister for
Joshua Chapel
at some point in the 1850s to 1880s. There is a J. Elbert who lived near
Trustee
family names continued to be involved with Joshua Chapel through the
generations. In 1904, some Joshua Chapel members attended the Delaware
Annual
Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in
By
the 1970s and 1980s, however,
Joshua Chapel was under the Millington-Pondtown Circuit, under the
Easton
District. According to the Official Journal Peninsula Annual Conference
of the
10. Kent County Register of Wills (Estate Papers) 1749-1940, T4834, Box 64, Hugh Wallis, Will, Baltimore City Archives; Kent County Circuit Court (Land Records), 1870-1873, MSA CE 57-11, JKH 5-607.
11. "Joshua
Chapel," K-441, Maryland Historical Trust, Inventory of Historic
Properties, http://mdihpnet.;
13. Karen Somerville, Local Historian, Telephone and email conversation, June 27, 2012.
14.
Ancestry.com,
U.S Census Bureau (Census Record, DE), Joseph Elbert, 1880, p.70, Dover
17. Official Journal of Peninsula
Annual Conference of the
United
Return
to Joshua Chapel Introductory Page
Researched and written by Kathy Thornton, 2012.
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