Historic Shepherdstown Church To Be Repurposed As Live Theater Venue

The congregation of the Christ Reformed United Church of Christ donated the historic building to the Contemporary American Theater Festival (CATF), which produces and develops new plays for worldwide audiences. 

A 275-year-old church in Shepherdstown will be repurposed as a theater venue after its final service was held earlier this year. 

The congregation of the Christ Reformed United Church of Christ donated the historic building to the Contemporary American Theater Festival (CATF), which produces and develops new plays for worldwide audiences. 

Founded in 1747, the United Church of Christ is the oldest church in Shepherdstown. It held its final service in January after the retirement of its pastor. 

The church congregation had begun to see that there was a need to maybe move that building on to its next purpose,” CATF Artistic Director Peggy McKowen said. “And so they started talking to various nonprofits that they wanted to give it to. It really is a situation in which people just happen to be at the right place at the right time, overhearing a conversation.”

McKowen said she wants to preserve what made the church special to its congregation while making it a place for the community to gather.

“We met with the representatives from the church, and I had a long conversation about really protecting the integrity of some of the historical elements of the church,” McKowen said. “The stained glass windows, also with the church comes the graveyard and the responsibility of that. I think the church congregation felt comfortable that CATF would uphold the usage of the building with a great sort of responsibility and grace to maintain the things that were really valued about it.”

The church will be used as a rehearsal space in the short-term with plans to use it as a performance venue in the future. By using the space this season, CATF is able to accommodate their talent’s work more easily. But before it’s available as a space for live performances, renovations need to be made to accommodate future audiences. That includes new restrooms, expanded seating and rigging for lights and sound. 

One idea is to devise a system to block the stained glass windows for blackouts during live performances, while keeping them revealed for other events. CATF is currently planning on fundraising for the new additions. 

“It would be really, really amazing and wonderful if our season in 2024 could have a performance down there as part of the summer,” McKowen said. “Whether that’s truly realistic, we’ll just have to see.”

The renovated church will be open to the public this year for the festival’s Fall Reading Series, which presents readings of plays under consideration for the 2024 season.

This year’s CATF season will take place from July 7 to July 30.

Three Charged In Connection With Fire At Historic W.Va. Church

Three people have been arrested in connection with a fire that destroyed a historic church in West Virginia, state police said.

Three people have been arrested in connection with a fire that destroyed a historic church in West Virginia, state police said.

Braxton Allan Miller, 18, of Charleston; James Dean Elmore, 19, of Beckley; and a juvenile boy were charged in connection with the fire at St. Colman Catholic Church in the Shady Spring area of Raleigh County, police said Wednesday.

The fire was reported Sunday morning but had started the night before, police said.

Miller and the juvenile were charged with arson and conspiracy, while Elmore was charged with accessory after the fact and conspiracy. All were being held. It wasn’t clear whether they had attorneys who could comment on their cases.

“We are deeply saddened to learn that the fire was considered an act of arson and was intended destroy this historic structure so important to the lives of many in the area,” Bishop Mark Brennan of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston said in a statement.

The historic church was built in 1878 on Irish Mountain and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984, WCHS-TV reported.

Life Returns to Historic Harpers Ferry Church

It’s been 59 years since the Curtis Freewill Baptist Church in Harpers Ferry has been open with a regular congregation. This historical African-American church was the main building of worship during the days of Storer College, a predominantly black school that first began as a place to teach former slaves and eventually grew into a full-fledged degree-granting institution.

It was open for 88 years until the Supreme Court’s decision over Brown v. Board of Education ended legal segregation in public schools. Storer College lost federal funding and closed its doors in 1955 and the church in 1956. But today, one clergywoman has brought new life into the school’s old church.

Reverend Jackie Dorsey is the pastor of For the Sake of the Soul Christian Church, which is currently using the Curtis Freewill Baptist Church thanks to a special use permit from the National Park Service.

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Reverend Jackie Dorsey, pastor of For the Sake of the Soul Christian Church.

“It’s a big deal for me in the aspect, I know that it’s to some people’s hearing, it’s just a church building, and the main thing is the presence of God is here. That’s the main thing. But I believe in holding onto history, we can’t live in the past, but people should never forget the past,” Dorsey said.

After Storer College closed, the National Park Service turned the grounds and its buildings into a Harpers Ferry National Monument in 1960, restoring many of the buildings and holding a special day each year to honor alums of the college.

Dorsey says she has been pastoring for almost thirty years, but she was always holding services in faraway locations – sometimes traveling two to three hours every Sunday.

Dorsey wanted to pastor closer to home, and she says God led her to the Curtis Freewill Baptist Church.

“I wanted the history of this church to, and this area, to remain in the people’s thoughts, and for people that don’t know about this church and Storer College to come into some knowledge of Harpers Ferry.”

The Beginning of Storer College

Credit Harpers Ferry National Historical National Park
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Storer College students, 1921

When the Civil War ended on April 9, 1865, there were over 30,000 newly freed slaves in the Shenandoah Valley. It was clear education was needed. With the help from the New England Freewill Baptists and a philanthropist from Maine named John Storer, Storer College officially opened its doors on October 2, 1867.

“Storer was really a very prominent school,” said Guinevere Roper, a park ranger for the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, “It was one of the first schools in the United States to teach newly freed slaves, and it was one of the very first schools in the state of West Virginia to teach newly freed slaves there. So it was like a little haven to the students that were there at Storer College.”

Eventually Storer would become a teacher’s college, and by 1938, it became a degree-granting college offering a variety of courses in higher education and industrial training.

Storer College was significant in the history of Civil Rights. It was the site of the first American meeting of the Niagara Movement, which was a precursor to the NAACP.

But Roper says at first the school wasn’t well-liked by the community, and some people would throw stones at the students and faculty as they walked to the post office.

“Storer College had a strong academic curriculum that prepared its graduates for the struggle that they would face in this segregated society,” Roper said.

The Legacy

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Russell Roper, Storer College Alum, 1950

Since Storer College began, many alumni have passed away, but there are some who are still around and are sharing their stories from their Storer College days.

Guinevere Roper’s cousin, Russell Roper, is one of those alums.

Russell Roper was born in 1925 and spent time in the Navy during World War II.

“I used to go down to the college before I started the college,” Roper explained, “see I got back here in January of 46’ and I’d go down to the college with the other guys, see football games, stuff like that, and basketball games.”

Roper went on to play football for Storer himself, and he graduated in 1950. He says the church played a prominent role for the students at Storer, because, after all, the college was a religious school.

“When you passed by, I mean passed through Storer College, if you only stayed there one year or six months, you passed through the church. You was a part of the church, and the church, not you part of the church, the church was a part of you.”

Roper says he was happy to hear the church is holding regular services again. And many people in the Harpers Ferry community feel the same way.

Back at the Curtis Freewill Baptist Church, a woman named Mary Greene sits with her two grandchildren as the congregation sings a hymn.

Greene grew up in Harpers Ferry and so did many in her family. She used to attend this church as a little girl when it was still open. She also had family who attended Storer College.

“It looks the same, it feels the same, you know,” Greene said, “It’s wonderful to know that something so long ago used to be so vibrant, and now it’s reopening.”

Greene says she hopes her grandchildren will learn to appreciate the history of Storer College, the church, and their family history in the area.

For those interested in attending Reverend Dorsey’s services at the Curtis Freewill Baptist Church, services are held on the first, third, and sometimes fifth Sundays of the month if there is one.

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