Skip to main content Skip to main navigation

Marcy Avenue Baptist Church records

Call Number

ARC.274

Date

1872-1958, inclusive

Creator

Marcy Avenue Baptist Church (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.)

Extent

3 Linear Feet
in two record cartons and three loose scrapbooks.

Language of Materials

English .

Abstract

This collection contains the administrative and organizational records of the Marcy Avenue Baptist Church, which began as an outgrowth of the Washington Avenue Baptist Church. The Church, located in the Bedford-Stuyvesant area of Brooklyn, was formed in 1872 and disbanned in 1939, after which its building became home to the Concord Baptist Church of Christ. The church experienced rapid growth and underwent several expansions in the 1870s and 1880s. By 1900, Marcy Avenue Baptist Church was the largest Baptist church in Brooklyn. Materials in the collection include membership rolls, registers, and marriage stubs, as well as Deacons reports, Ladies Aid Society reports, Sunday School Superintendent reports, Benevolent Society reports, reports of the Board of Trustees, and general Church statistics.

Historical Note

The Marcy Avenue Baptist Church came about as an expansion of the Washington Avenue Baptist Church. Its original location at Marcy Avenue and Monroe Street in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn formerly belonged to the Central Congregational Church, which was purchased in June of 1872 by the Trustees of the Washington Avenue Baptist Church, after which it functioned as a Sunday school. In September of 1872, preaching services were begun at the Marcy Avenue building. These services were conducted by several pastors from various Baptist churches in the area. With the addition of worship services, it was determined that steps should be taken to organize a new church. The full development of the Marcy Avenue Baptist Church began on November 10, 1873. The chapel and adjoining lots were donated by the Washington Avenue Baptist Church, and the Reverend Reuben Jeffery, D.D. assumed the charge as first pastor of the congregation.

As the congregation grew, additional lots were purchased (125 feet on Marcy Avenue and 100 feet on Monroe Street) for an expansion of the Church, which was completed in October of 1874. The Church grew at such a rate that additional expansion projects were completed in 1876 and again in 1878.

With growth continuing, by 1887 plans were under way to construct a new church building, which was to be built at the corner of Putnam and Marcy Avenues at an estimated cost of $140,000. The plot of ground on which the church was built belonged to Mr. Theodore Banta, who exchanged it for the lots on which the church presently stood. By 1900, the Marcy Avenue Baptist Church, housed in its new Romanesque building, was the largest Baptist church in Brooklyn.

In March of 1939, the Marcy Avenue Baptist Church was taken over by the Concord Baptist congregation to meet the rapidly increasing need for a large church for African American worshipers in the Bedford-Stuyvesant area. Concord Baptist was established in 1847 and occupied other sites before moving to Marcy and Putnam Avenues in 1939.

Sources:

  1. "Brooklyn Church Marks Reopening." The New York Times, April 2, 1956.
  2. "A New Church in Brooklyn." The New York Times, June 14, 1874. Accessed October 25, 2011. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10A15FB3F5F1A7493C6A8178DD85F408784F9&scp=1&sq=%22a%20new%20church%20in%20brooklyn%22&st=cse

Scope and Contents

This collection contains the administrative and organizational records of the Marcy Avenue Baptist Church, as well as Church ephemera, dating from 1872 to 1939. The collection is comprised of three accessions, which have been processed as separate series:

Missing Title

  1. Accession 1985.081, 1872-1927
  2. Accession 1977.206, 1874-1958
  3. Accession v1997.036, circa 1925

Conditions Governing Access

Open to users without restriction.

Preferred Citation

Identification of item, date (if known); Marcy Avenue Baptist Church records, ARC.274, Box and Folder number; Brooklyn Historical Society.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Accession 1977.206 was the gift of Emily Austin Madden, 1958 and 1960. Accession v1997.036 was the gift of Barbara Quimby, date unknown. Source and date of acquisition for accession 1985.081 are unknown. Volume I, Number 5 of the Marcy Monthly was the gift of John Manbeck, 2013.

Related Materials

Related materials at the Brooklyn Historical Society:

Missing Title

  1. 1978.152, Long Island Baptist Association records, 1819-1923
  2. 1985.064, Washington Avenue Baptist Church records, 1851-1930
  3. 1986.013, Baptist churches of Brooklyn publications and ephemera, 1840-1957
  4. ARC.086, Records of the Central Congregational Society and Church, 1854-1945

Other Finding Aids

An earlier version of this finding aid, containing a complete container list, is available in paper form at the Brooklyn Historical Society. Please consult library staff for more information.

Collection processed by

Sativa Peterson

About this Guide

This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on 2023-08-21 11:16:36 +0000.
Using Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language: English

Processing Information

Minimally processed to the series level.

The collection combines the accessions 1977.206, 1985.081, and v1997.036. One issue of the Marcy Monthly (Volume I, Number 5, September 1927) was added to the collection in 2016.

Repository

Brooklyn Historical Society

Container

carton: ARC.274 1 of 5 (Material Type: Text)
item: ARC.274 3 of 5 (Scrapbook) (Material Type: Text)
carton: ARC.274 2 of 5 (Material Type: Text)
item: ARC.274 5 of 5 (Scrapbook) (Material Type: Text)
item: ARC.274 4 of 5 (Scrapbook) (Material Type: Text)
Center for Brooklyn History
128 Pierrepont Street
Brooklyn, NY 11201