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The Historical Register
of the Louisiana Conference
The photographs of the Louisiana Conference United Methodist churches were
taken by Mr. Hebert from 1994 to 2004. The original pictures and
negatives will be stored at the Archives at Centenary.
The ‘City’ is where the church can be found. For rural churches,
it is sometimes the nearest community or town. The address is the
physical address, not necessarily the mailing address. For the current
mailing address and phone numbers, consult the most recent Conference Journal.
The ‘Founded’ date
may not appear for all churches. Different churches may also declare
their formation date according to different criteria. For some, they
may date their church to when the first Methodist services were held in
the area. Others use the date of the formation of the first society
or congregation. The most common method of identifying a founding
date is to use the date of the construction of the first church building.
If a church identifies its founding date as the organization of the church
(before a church was constructed), I tried to respect that and use the
date given. For some churches that began in the 19th century, exact
records for the founding date could not be found. If the date given
is different than the date accepted by your church, please let me know
< tim@la-umc.org >.
The church histories may contain varying amounts of information, depending
on what was submitted. If the material was titled or published, that
information was listed as the source. For the most part, the brief
histories concentrate on the formation of each church and its facilities
over the years. That information forms a framework for the church
over the years and is a good starting point for compiling histories.
Material such as individual church groups and general statements were kept
to a minimum to conserve space. Most if not all church histories
could state they formed UMW groups, held youth activities, have been blessed
by God in many ways, etc. For example, this statement was given by
one church: “The congregation continues a rich legacy of mission and ministry
to the larger community and world! Thanks be to God!” Similar statements
can be found in the material submitted for many church histories.
Though they may have been left out of these abridged versions, I think
we can all agree … for all of our churches … that they were cultivated
over the years by many faithful members and clergy, that people were blessed
by the mission and ministry of our churches, and that we pray God will
continue to bless our churches and our people and will use them to do great
things. A separate work on the faith stories across the Conference
was planned to expand upon such material … but due to a lack of response
from churches it had to be cancelled.
The data that was submitted on church histories will be scanned in its
entirety (except for copyrighted books). Since only half a page of
material could be fit onto each Register page, there is much more information
available for many churches. The scanned data will be stored on DVDs
at Centenary and at Dillard. Much of it will also be added to the
online Historical Register. The original submitted material will
be stored at the Archives at Centenary College.
The churches are arranged by districts. Over the years, the districts
have changed … in number, district office location, and churches included.
In 2003, the Annual Conference voted to reduce the number of districts
from nine to seven. The Ruston and North Shore districts were eliminated
and their churches placed in one of the other seven districts.
The layout of this project was adjusted in the spring of 2004 to conform
to the new seven district arrangement.
History of the Historical Register Project
The Historical Register Project began about 1994. Tim Hebert was
working on writing a history of the United Methodist Church in the Houma
and Terrebonne Parish area for FUMC Houma’s 150th anniversary in 1995.
In trying to find information on nearby congregations, he found that the
history of some of our churches was hard to find … especially for
smaller rural churches. So he began researching the histories of
Acadiana District churches and visited each church to take a picture. Naming
the project the Historical Register, he approached the Commission on Archives
and History with the completed Acadiana District and inquired about expanding
the scope to include the entire Conference. The Commission agreed
to support the project in concept and financially (to pay for expenses
incurred). Mr. Hebert later found that a similar idea had already
been suggested by the Commission in the 1970s, and Rev. Bill McCutcheon
had assembled summaries of about 150 churches in 1992. The history
of the Louisiana Conference … Becoming One People … had been
written in the 1980s, but did not include much information on individual
churches.
Working
one district at a time, Mr. Hebert began working his way through the Conference.
After each of the first four districts, a district version of the Historical
Register was completed and printed. To visit every church in the
Conference required a cumulative 30+ days and over 10,000 miles of driving
… spread out over the course of ten years.
After
Mr. Hebert got more involved in other Conference tasks (as Conference Lay
Speaking Director and Conference web servant), work on the Register slowed
down. The project was also delayed to provide time for those
churches to respond. After initial visits and contacts of churches
in all nine districts, there were still 200 churches that hadn’t submitted
a history for inclusion in the project.
Finally,
with the end of the quadrennium approaching, the Historical Register was
completed. A final attempt at securing missing church histories was
made in the spring of 2004. A rough draft of the material was placed
online in March 2004, and churches were asked to verify their church’s
information. Although every church did not submit a history, hopefully
material will later be found and added.
The updated
information will be posted on this web version of the Historical Register
<http://www.historicalregister.org/>. Replacement pages will be
available online to print and add to existing printed copies. If
there are errors or corrections that need to be made in the future, please
send them to Tim Hebert < tim@la-umc.org >.
For more information on the clergy that have guided the Church over the
years, all available Memoirs (obituaries published in Conference Journals)
have been posted online in a searchable Honor
Roll database at <http://www.iscuo.org/memoirsproject.htm>.
Current
information on the Louisiana Conference and its mission and ministries
can be found at its website <http://www.la-umc.org/>.
Links to each district’s current information page are located at <http://www.la-umc.org/churches.htm>.
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