Thirgood Memorial CME Church: Difference between revisions

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'''Thirgood Memorial Christian Methodist Episcopal Church''' (formerly '''Thirgood Memorial Colored Methodist Episcopal Church''') is a congregation affiliated with the [[North Alabama Conference of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church]], located at 517 [[Center Street North]] in [[Birmingham]]'s [[Smithfield]] neighborhood. It is Birmingham's second-largest CME church (after [[Southside CME Church]]), reporting about 658 members in [[2011]]. [[Lamont Johnson]] is the pastor and [[Lilly Rainey]] is presiding elder.
'''Thirgood Memorial Christian Methodist Episcopal Church''' (formerly '''Thirgood Memorial Colored Methodist Episcopal Church''') is a congregation affiliated with the [[Birmingham District of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church]], located at 517 [[Center Street North]] in [[Birmingham]]'s [[Smithfield]] neighborhood. It is named in honor of Reverend [[R. T. Thirgood]].
 
Thirgood Memorial is Birmingham's second-largest CME church (after [[Southside CME Church]]), reporting about 658 members in [[2011]]. [[Lamont Johnson]] is the pastor.


Thirgood Memorial was founded in [[1879]] and was formerly located at 1027 [[7th Avenue North]]. During the [[Civil Rights Movement]] it hosted a mass meeting on [[Easter Sunday]] in the midst of the [[Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights]]' [[Birmingham campaign]]. The meeting transformed itself into a march toward the [[Birmingham Jail]] where [[Martin Luther King Jr]] and [[Ralph Abernathy]] were serving sentences for parading without permits. The crowd of 1,500 to 2,000 marchers met less organized protesters near the jail and the unruly crowd was dispersed by police, with 26 people arrested at the scene. Thirgood Memorial also accommodated overflow crowds from mass meetings at nearby [[St James Baptist Church]].
Thirgood Memorial was founded in [[1879]] and was formerly located at 1027 [[7th Avenue North]]. During the [[Civil Rights Movement]] it hosted a mass meeting on [[Easter Sunday]] in the midst of the [[Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights]]' [[Birmingham campaign]]. The meeting transformed itself into a march toward the [[Birmingham Jail]] where [[Martin Luther King Jr]] and [[Ralph Abernathy]] were serving sentences for parading without permits. The crowd of 1,500 to 2,000 marchers met less organized protesters near the jail and the unruly crowd was dispersed by police, with 26 people arrested at the scene. Thirgood Memorial also accommodated overflow crowds from mass meetings at nearby [[St James Baptist Church]].


The church relocated to its present building during [[Nathaniel Linsey]]'s tenure as pastor in the mid-1960s.
==Pastors==
* [[Nathaniel Linsey]], 1962-1966
* [[Lamont Johnson]], present
==External links==
* [http://www.birminghamdistrictcme.org/ourchurches.htm Birmingham District of the C.M.E. Church] website


[[Category:CME churches]]
[[Category:CME churches]]

Revision as of 09:48, 14 October 2016

Thirgood Memorial Christian Methodist Episcopal Church (formerly Thirgood Memorial Colored Methodist Episcopal Church) is a congregation affiliated with the Birmingham District of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, located at 517 Center Street North in Birmingham's Smithfield neighborhood. It is named in honor of Reverend R. T. Thirgood.

Thirgood Memorial is Birmingham's second-largest CME church (after Southside CME Church), reporting about 658 members in 2011. Lamont Johnson is the pastor.

Thirgood Memorial was founded in 1879 and was formerly located at 1027 7th Avenue North. During the Civil Rights Movement it hosted a mass meeting on Easter Sunday in the midst of the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights' Birmingham campaign. The meeting transformed itself into a march toward the Birmingham Jail where Martin Luther King Jr and Ralph Abernathy were serving sentences for parading without permits. The crowd of 1,500 to 2,000 marchers met less organized protesters near the jail and the unruly crowd was dispersed by police, with 26 people arrested at the scene. Thirgood Memorial also accommodated overflow crowds from mass meetings at nearby St James Baptist Church.

The church relocated to its present building during Nathaniel Linsey's tenure as pastor in the mid-1960s.

Pastors

External links