Slash Church, Disciples Of Christ Church

Slash Church, Disciples Of Christ Church

About

The weatherboarded Slash Church was erected in 1729-32 by Thomas Pinchback and Edward Chambers, Jr., as the Upper Church of the Anglican St. Paul's Parish. The Hanover County building survives as the best-preserved wooden colonial church in the state, the only one to escape enlargement. Typical of up-country ecclesiastical structures, the building is a simple rectangle with a gable roof and a front and side entrance. Its roof framing employs an early king post truss system. Next to the swampy woods from whence it derives its present name, the Slash Church claims among its early worshipers Patrick Henry, Dolley Madison, and Henry Clay, all sometime residents of the area. The church fell into disuse after the disestablishment and was eventually taken over by the Methodists and the Disciples of Christ. The latter denomination has used the Slash Church exclusively since 1842.

Details

Hanover County
Church/Cemetery
11353 Mt Hermon Rd
Ashland, VA 23005

 

In the Area

Randolph-Macon College
144 College Ave
Ashland