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History of
Highland Presbyterian Church
The history of Highland Presbyterian Church
is a record of the devotion and hard work of its members throughout
the years of the church's existence. When the
Building Fund Committee set out on its
formidable campaign in 1958 to obtain funds to build a new $550,000
Sanctuary, it was the same indomitable spirit that motivated a small
group of Presbyterians to establish the church in 1911. The request
for the establishment of a new church was introduced at the spring
meeting of the Presbytery of Fayetteville at Laurinburg, North
Carolina on April 13, 1911. The session minutes record that an
"overture was presented from certain members of the Presbyterian
Church, resident in the Haymount section of Fayetteville, requesting
that a commission be appointed to visit that community, inquire into
the feasibility of organizing a church there, and to organize the
church if it be deemed advisable."
Click
here for photos of Highland Presbyterian Ministers
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| The request was granted and the following
commission was appointed: Rev. A. W. Crawford, Chairman, Rev. J. B.
Cockran, Rev. A. R.. McQueen, Ruling Elders Lock Shaw of the St.
Paul's Presbyterian Church, and A. L. James of the Laurinburg
Church. |
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The commission held a meeting on June 5,
1911 in the Graded School Building in Hay Street in Fayetteville. A
formal petition signed by thirty-nine residents of the Haymount
section of Fayetteville asking that they be organized into a church
was presented. The petition was granted and the church was formally
organized. Members of the church set out immediately to locate a
place to worship. They obtained use of the old Buieville Academy,
located on the street later to be named Oakridge Avenue. The first
service was held there September 24, 1911, and was conducted by the
Rev. R. C. Reed, D. D., of Columbia, South Carolina. Various
ministers served temporarily until a full time pastor could be
obtained. The church was originally named "The Haymount
Presbyterian Church" a name descriptive of the community it was
to serve. A few months later, however, it was felt the name should
be changed and members were asked for suggestions. Mrs. W. B.
Malloy, thinking of the Highland Scots, submitted "Highland
Presbyterian Church." This name was accepted by the
congregation, and the change was formally approved by Presbytery on
April 17, 1912. Soon after the organization, a building committee
was appointed. At a meeting of the congregation on March 13, 1912
minutes record that "the trustees were instructed to purchase
from Mr. L. Gentry at a price not to exceed $1575 a lot, 114 x 300
ft. on Hay Street extended, on which to erect a church
building." Plans were begun for the new church.
Eighteen months later the new building
was ready for services. The determination and
resourcefulness of those early members of Highland is illustrated by
the story of how the women of the church got down on their hands and
knees and tacked down the carpet in the new Sanctuary. It was an
enthusiastic congregation that progressed in a body from the
Buieville Academy building to the new church on Hay Street to begin
service that Sunday morning, September 7, 1913. The entire Sunday
School formed the group which marched to the new building as the
choir sang "Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow." At that time
the church membership totaled 60 and the Sunday School enrolled was
93.
Total contributions for the year ending
March 31, 1913, the first year for which records were kept, amounted
to $5,291. During the first few years a house located in Clarendon
Street was rented by the church for the minister's home. In 1919
this house and a large lot was sold and a new manse was erected on
the corner of Clarendon and Spring Streets. This house was sold in
1951 and the present manse, located at 520 Valley Road, was
purchased.
Ten years after the construction of the
church, it became necessary to enlarge the building. In 1923, while
the Rev. S. K. Phillips was pastor, additional Sunday School rooms,
a kitchen, parlor and offices were added. Special services
observance of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the church were held
on October 18 and 19, 1936.
As membership and activities at Highland
grew, the need for expanded facilities became more insistent. The
church purchased additional property on Hay Street, Highland Avenue
and Arsenal Avenue during the 1940's. An enlargement proposal was
adapted in 1941 and plans were being made to begin study of this
project when the war began, forcing postponement of the expansion.
In order that funds might be available when building could begin, a
Building Fund committee was appointed. An initial gift of $1,000 had
been made to the building fund in 1939 from the estate of Miss Annie
K. Evans. In the fall of 1945 a Building Committee was appointed and
directed to select an architect. They selected Thomas and Wagoner of
Philadelphia, PA, specialists in church architecture, to draw the
plans.
By March 1950 the first phase of the new
plant was completed, consisting of an Educational Building, Chapel,
Library, Church Parlor, Kitchen, Offices and a
Fellowship Hall. Cable Construction Company
of Greensboro, NC was the contractor and the total cost was
$337,227. By April 1957 the debt had been paid and a Dedication
Service was held on April 28 of that year. Dr. Samuel Howie was
minister during this period.
Since the auditorium in the original church
was inadequate, worship services were held in the new Fellowship
Hall, beginning in the fall of 1950. The old building, however, was
used by the newly organized Holy Trinity Episcopal Church while
their church was under construction.
In 1954 the old building was torn down and
the usable material given to Sherwood Presbyterian Church, located
on Highway 87 South, to be used for the erection of an Educational
Building. The pews were given to the Lillington Presbyterian Church.
With the old Sanctuary razed, the site cleared, and the church free
of debt, plans were made for the second phase of the building
program, the erection of the new Sanctuary. In December 1959 a
contract for general construction was awarded to Player, Inc. of
Fayetteville. On December 20, 1959, following the morning worship
service, a Dedication Service was held on the church grounds where
the Sanctuary was to be built. The minister and choir led the
congregation from the Fellowship Hall to the site, all singing, "Oh,
Come All Ye Faithful."
Construction began immediately and the
building was completed early in September of 1961. The Dedication
Service was held on September 10, the first Sunday the Sanctuary was
occupied. Of true colonial architecture, it is designed with a
spacious portico adorned with six imposing columns. Rising 148 feet
above it is a beautiful slender spire housing Schulmeric bells.
Seating more than 700 people, the nave is designed with high vaulted
ceiling, wide center aisle, two aisles at the sides, two transepts,
and a divided chancel. Impressive hand-fluted columns add to its
beauty. The pulpit, lectern, and baptismal font are adorned with
appropriate Christian symbols. The console of the three-manual pipe
organ is placed immediately behind the pulpit. At the top of the
reredos is a broken arch. In the space
thus provided is a hand-carved seal of the Presbyterian Church in
the United States. The outstanding feature of the reredos is the
slender cross under which there are six hand-carved symbols of wood
portraying Matthew, Mark, Luke, John and the earliest Christian
symbols - a
fish and a boat. The center of emphasis in the Sanctuary is the
beautifully carved communion table, placed just under the cross, and
visible to every worshiper. Built for the Glory of God, the new
church was the crowning achievement of fifty years of love and
sacrifice.
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In the 80's,
Scottish Heritage Sunday was started at the church to
celebrate our Scottish heritage. It included tartan bearers,
carried by members with Scottish heritage and a bagpiper
playing on the front lawn and leading the procession of the
tartan bearers in the Sanctuary.
In the fall of
1986, the 75th Anniversary Year, under the leadership of Dr.
Robert W. Gray, Pastor, a Capital Funds Campaign was
launched to raise funds to renovate and refurbish the
church. Pledges, to be paid over a three-year period, were
received for over $650,000. A Refurbishing Committee was
appointed to administer this task.
Dr. J.
Ernest Johnson became minister of Highland on September 15,
1990. The 90's was a decade that saw
the expansion of such programs at Highland as The Presbyterian Women
and Highland Men, The Highland Youth Program, The Stephen Ministers,
The Senior Adults (the Flingers), Vacation Bible Schools, the
Children’s Programs, the Adult Sunday School Program, and numerous
other opportunities. During Dr. Johnson’s tenure The Rev. Keith
Riddle and The Rev. Robert Snyder have served as Associate
Ministers. In 1998, Steven R. Gibson came to Highland as Director of
Music Ministries and instituted a number of musical opportunities
and programs within the church.
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In the spring of 1999, a Committee
of Twelve was established by the Session to work with an architect
to develop drawings for expanding the church facilities. WKWW
Architects of Charlotte was hired to complete the plans over the
next eighteen months. In the fall of 2000, a Capital Campaign was
held with a goal of raising $5,000,000 over the next four years.
Construction of the project was awarded to Player, Inc. as builders
for the sanctuary project in 1961.
Among the notable events of this
period were the celebration of the church’s 85th Anniversary with
the burying of a time capsule in the front yard, the visit of the
Chaplain of the US Senate, the opening of the Bridges Center, and
the service held the evening of September 11, 2001.
A ground breaking was held for the
first phase of construction on Sunday, April 29, 2001. By the fall
of that year, the first phase of the renovation was completed and
the new elevator lobby was dedicated on Sunday, November 11, 2001.
The dedication of the Highland Recreation and
Learning Center, which includes a recreation
center with a gym, walking track, and fitness facility, a new
library, three new elevators, expanded music and rehearsal space,
adult, youth, and children’s classroom space, a new lobby, and a new
kitchen and fellowship hall, was on Sunday, September 14, 2003.
The Highland Learning Center, with a
Montessori program, daycare, and innovative playground, a Recreation
Ministry, with a variety of activities, and the Highland School of
the Performing Arts, with classes for all ages, will occupy the new
facility. In addition, the space beneath the Sanctuary has been
transformed through the creative insight of Director of Children’s
Education, Libby Rogers, into Son Valley, a multi-sensory learning
environment for children. God continues to bless the congregation of
Highland Presbyterian Church and its Ministry.
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From its founding in 1911 to
present day, Highland Presbyterian Church has observed many special
days. Sunday, September 14, 2003, Dedication Day for the Highland
Recreation and Learning Center, was one of those special days.
A capacity crowd of Highland
members and their guests attended the eleven o’clock service which
opened with the congregational hymn "The Church’s One Foundation."
Dr. Johnson delivered an inspirational sermon entitled "Looking Back
and Moving Forward." Music for the morning included selections by
the TrebleMakers (Children’s Choir), the Chancel Choir, and the
Highland Praise Choir, supported by bells, brass, timpani and
cymbals.
Following a dramatic presentation
by the Highland Performing Arts, directed by Susan Tolar-Walters,
HPAC Director, entitled "Highland Beginnings," the
congregation, led by the children of the church, processed to the
new Highland Recreation and Learning Center where a service of
dedication was held in the new gymnasium. Annabel Pender was
Director of the Learning Center at that time. A new Montessori
School was also added to the Highland Learning Center. At the conclusion of the
service, all in attendance gathered in the newly-renovated
Fellowship Hall for a covered dish lunch. Tours of the new and
renovated facilities were provided following the noon meal. Those in
attendance were given medallions as keepsakes of this special
occasion when the Highland Recreation and Learning Center, dedicated
to "the physical, mental, and spiritual health of all who enter,"
was officially opened.
On March 1, 2006 Cathy Wilson
joined the staff of Highland as Director of Music Ministries; Brent
Stapleton joined the staff on October 1, 2006 as Church Organist and Dr. Ewart
"Doc" Wyle joined in March 2007 as Parish Associate.
The congregation, under Dr.
Johnson’s eighteen years of leadership, has experienced a 50%
growth, with the congregation now numbering just over 1100. The
ministry and outreach of the church have expanded to include mission
trips to Mexico and Appalachia. "Operation InAsMuch" continues to
reach out into the surrounding community touching peoples’ lives.
The Highland Tutoring Ministry helps to ensure success in school for
the children of the area and the Thanksgiving Meal, served in
partnership with the Salvation Army, provides over 1200 meals to the
greater Fayetteville community. Highland provides organizational
help to the effort known as Samaritan’s Purse, with the congregation
filling more than 500 shoeboxes that join over 25,000 boxes from the
larger faith community. Highland also hosts Interfaith Hospitality
at the church several times a year.
In September, 2007 a new service,
a praise and worship service, "Second Mile," was
added on Sunday mornings at 8:45 am. The Rev. Chip Stapleton, who
joined the staff as Associate Minister to Youth and Families on July
2, 2007, leads this service along with Dr. Johnson. Peg Gledhill was
hired in August, 2007 as Praise & Worship Leader. This service has been
successful in recruiting new members, who want a more casual rather
than traditional service.
Alecia Paschal was hired in
January 2008 as Director of Highland Learning Center.
And so, the journey continues. .
"May all who enter tread with
thankfulness the courts of the Lord's house,
and, in reverent
assembly bow with devotion, prayer, and praise before
the great Head
of the Church, to whom be glory and majesty dominion,
and power,
both now and ever more." AMEN. |
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