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Doubtless
the very oldest church organization in Northeast Missouri
-certainly the first formed in Marion county --is South River
Church, in this township. It was constituted in the year 1821,
and formed then, as it does now, a congregation of the Primitive
or Old School Baptists. Some of the first or constitutional
members were Hawkins Smith, Thos. Lewis, John Longmire,
Zachariah Feagan, Benjamin Thomas, James Lear, Polly Lear, Sally
Feagan, and Elizabeth Smith. For some time the congregation met
in the houses of the members, but in 1826 ( ?), a small log
church was built near a large spring, on South river, on section
12, tp. 57, range 6, near where the present Hannibal and St.
Joseph railroad crosses that stream. This building was erected
by contributed labor and material, and its cost was nominal. It
was the first church building erected in Marion county. The
first pastor of the congregation was Rev. Mordecai Boulware, the
second Wm. Fuqua. The names of all of the succeeding pastors
cannot be given. Rev. Wm. Priest, of Ralls county, is the
present preacher in charge. The present church building of South
River Church is a brick and stands on the banks of South river,
in section 11, tp. 57, range 6, three miles south of Palmyra. It
was built in 1868, at a cost of $3,000. The first sermon
preached in it was by Henry Louthan. In the division of the
Baptist church, in 1835, South River church separated from the
Missionary “ Sunday School,” and “ Means party,” as the
New School Baptists were termed, and remained with the old
Primitive church, believing that the employment of missionaries,
Sunday schools, and other agencies of that sort as auxiliaries
in evangelizing the world, and making the unregenerate fit
subjects for the Messiah’s Kingdom, was and is unauthorized by
the Bible. At present (September, 1883,) the number of members
of the church is but 10.
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