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New Hope UMC
was established in 1838. This picture is the second
church building. There is no record of the first
building. Some believe it was a log structure. This
building was constructed in 1850. |

This church
building was constructed in 1947. Mr. Clark Eldridge is
leaving the building. |

In later years a porch and Sunday School
rooms were added. Still later the church was bricked and the
interior remodeled. The fellowship hall was built in 1995.
From "Kemper County, Mississippi - A
Pictorial History", placed here with permission by the Kemper County
Historical Commission.
Click on
the pictures for a larger view. Submitted by Bonnie Evans.
History below
submitted by Imogene Casey
New Hope as pictured in "Kemper County
Churches" was just before its demolition. The Church building which
stood for a hundred years was built by William Eldridge Riley before
1850, but I never asked how much before. It was built on a five acre
plot donated by the Lovelady family. Some years later, ten adjoining
acres were given, probably by Martha Jane Lovelady Houston. Records
were burned, and the church was allowed only two of the ten in the
survey--giving seven acres in all.
Riley sawed the lumber with a pecksaw which had two teeth, and
smoothed it with a hand plane. It was put together with wooden pegs
and a few nails which looked as if they had been made by a
blacksmith. If one looks closely at the front gable in the picture,
some intricate woodwork is still discernable. The ceiling boards
inside were of random width and like heart pine. The pews were made
of the same pine lumber--having a very wide board for the backs and
one not so wide for the seats. there were three rows of seats, short
on each side and long in the middle. A one by four was placed across
the top of the center row of pews, thus dividing the sanctuary into
half so that men sat on one side and women on the other. When I was
a teenager, we held hands with our sweethearts underneath the board.
According Cornelia Cridele Houston Riley and Elry Riley, there was
an extra room or balcony where the slaves sat--probably with the
little children. I never was able to find where it had been and
imagine it was torn away or was in the steep loft.
In 1933 the walls began to pull away from the ceiling at the eaves.
Mr. Bill Eldridge and Mr. Irvin Riley went to Meridian and bought
two big turn-buckles to pull it back together, and it stayed that
way until the late forties or early fifties when the congregation
decided they must put up a new building.
The new building was a built of wood by Mr. Irvin Riley, Mr. Lewis
Eldridge and their boys. It was bricked in later, but I don't have
the date.
Two of my brothers, My parents, my grandparents, and all of my great
grandparents except one who was left on a battlefield are buried in
New Hope Cemetery.
Sincerely,
Imogene Riley Casey
PS
Some believe that Eleazer Houston gave the land. He owned the
eastern half of section two. Overstreets owned the northwest 1/4 of
section 2, and the southwest 1/4 was owned by the Lovelady family.
The church is located in the southwest 1/4. My grandmother, Eleazer
Houston's daughter said the five acres were given by two maiden
ladies named Lovelady. Martha Jane Lovelady married My grandmother's
brother, Jefferson Houston
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