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About
Us
History
of City Road Chapel
City Road
Chapel is believed to be an outgrowth of a service conducted
by the Rev. Green Hill, July 3, 1796, on the Cumberland River
banks at Neelys Lick. The recorded history begins with
the building of a house of worship in the summer of 1848.
Located in the middle of what is now Madison, it was named
City Road Chapel after John Wesleys first church in
London. In an article that fall, the Christian Advocate talked
about the new church saying, Its doors will ever be
open to the true worshippers, and we pray its altar fires
may ever burn pure incense of prayer and praise.
A few
years after the Civil War, with the building in bad repair
and the congregation dwindling, City Road Chapel united with
McFerrins Chapel in a new church down Neelys Bend
Road called Midway. The church opened in 1872. There were
complaints that the location was not convenient, however,
and after the Midway building burned in 1899, a new church
was built at the present site and re-named City Road Chapel.
An annex
of nine rooms for educational use was built on the north side
in 1923. In 1936, it was decided to build a large stone basement
foundation and later erect a new sanctuary above it. Within
a year, the basement foundation had been built. Construction
on the sanctuary (our present place of worship) was started
promptly, with the cornerstone laid May 15, 1938.
In 1950,
the congregation voted to tear down the 1899 building to make
way for a three-story education unit. Another three-story
education building was completed in 1968.
On November
29, 1992, the congregation accepted the Building Committees
recommendation of a multipurpose building and renovations
to the older portions of the church. Groundbreaking for the
new Fellowship Center was held on July 4, 1993, and the structure
was completed in the spring of 1994. It contains space to
serve 500 meals, a kitchen for meal preparation, a permanent
stage, an elevated walking track, facilities for volleyball
and basketball, and an elevator from the parking lot to the
main (second) floor.
Throughout
the years, City Road has ministered to the community and is
living its mission statement Growing in Christ, Sharing
Gods Love. With the high level of activity at
City Road Chapel, there is little doubt that the Christian
Advocates prediction in 1848 has come trueIts
doors will ever be open.
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