Grub Hill Episcopal Church

Grub Hill Episcopal Church

About

Consecrated in 1852 by Bishop William Meade, St. John's Church in Amelia County was a product of the reactivation of the Episcopal denomination in rural Virginia during the mid-19th century. It is on the site of a colonial church known simply as Grub Hill Church, a name derived from the "Grub Hill" slave quarters of the Tabb family, who gave the land for the building. At the end of the 18th century, John Tabb owned ten plantations in Amelia County and one in Dinwiddie County, along with a sizeable holding in the city of Petersburg. The present church, a country builder's version of the Gothic Revival, has an honest simplicity that yet inspires admiration. It remains relatively unaltered and is enhanced by a pleasant rural setting, on a small but conspicuous knoll in the farmlands of Amelia County, west of Chula. The principal interior furnishings, including an ornamented triptych, are the signed work of a woodcarver, H. Jacob, completed in 1870. Owned by the trustees of Christ Episcopal Church in Amelia, St. John's Church is used for occasional summer services.

Details

Amelia County
Historic Site

Amelia Court House, VA 23002

 

In the Area

Dykeland
Off Chula Rd
Amelia Court House
Haw Branch
Haw Branch Ln
Amelia Court House