Primitive Baptist Church of Brookfield

Primitive Baptist Church of Brookfield

Infobox religious building
building_name = Primitive Baptist Church of Brookfield
infobox_width = 300px



image_size = 300px
caption = Front (south) elevation, 2007
map_type =
map_size =
map_caption =
location = Slate Hill, NY, USA
geo = coord|41|23|25|N|74|28|26|W
latitude =
longitude =
religious_affiliation = Primitive Baptist
consecration_year = 1792cite web|last=Gobrecht|first=Larry|title=National Register of Historic Places nomination, Primitive Baptist Church of Brookfield|url=http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=6593|publisher=New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation|date=1976-07-21|accessdate=2008-07-26]
status = church
functional_status = preserved
heritage_designation =
leadership =
website =
architecture = yes
architect =
architecture_type =
architecture_style =
general_contractor =
facade_direction = south
groundbreaking = 1792cite web|last=Gobrecht|first=Larry|title=National Register of Historic Places nomination, Primitive Baptist Church of Brookfield|url=http://www.oprhp.state.ny.us/hpimaging/hp_view.asp?GroupView=6593|publisher=New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation|date=1976-07-21|accessdate=2008-07-26]
year_completed = 1792
construction_cost =
specifications = yes
capacity =
length =
width =
width_nave =
height_max =
spire_quantity =
spire_height =
materials = wood
nrhp = yes
added = 1976
refnum = 76001260
designated =
The Primitive Baptist Church of Brookfield, also known as the Old School Baptist Meeting House, is located along US 6 in Slate Hill, New York, USA, a hamlet of the Town of Wawayanda in Orange County. It was built in 1792, when the settlement was known as Brookfield. It is one of the oldest extant church buildings in the county, and one of the earliest buildings in the settlement that became Slate Hill.

In 1976 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places due to its age and architectural interest as a late example of vernacular building techniques much more common in the early 18th century. Although the last member of the died in 1933, local preservationists have continued holding the annual meeting to keep the church incorporated. It is, however, not used for any services.

Building

Located on a slight rise on the north side of Route 6 just east of the intersection with NY 284 at the center of the hamlet, the church is a tall white two-story clapboard gable-roofed structure. A four-story tower with belfry and spire, added later, stands at the front. The north (rear) and west sides are two bays apiece and still have most of the original sashing on their windows. The east side has three bays, reflecting its onetime status as the church's main entrance, and it still has the classically detailed doorway with sidelights. The cornice's original dentils are still present but difficult to see.

Inside there are box pews typical of the era with raised and fielded panels, a late medieval touch. A hexagonal raised pulpit is mounted against the west wall. A three-sided gallery fills the building's second story; it can be reached via the tower stairs. The entire interior is done in unpainted white pine.

There are no outbuildings. A cemetery with gravestones dating to the era of the church's founding is located to the east.

History

The meetings of local Baptists that became the church began in 1783 at nearby Woodlawn Farm, the home of member Richard Wood, an early local settler. Eight years later, in 1791, the church was formally incorporated and the following year another member, Joseph Hallock, gave land for the church to be built. It took the Brookfield name from the growing settlement.

In 1828 the tower was added, with the stairs inside allowing more seating capacity within. Five years later, the church broke with mainstream Baptism and affiliated itself instead with the Primitive Baptist movement, which the year before had rejected the evangelical directions the denomination was taking in the Second Great Awakening. Believing that eschewing foreign missions and Sunday schools was more in line with early Calvinism, they were also sometimes called the Old School Meetinghouse of Brookfield. They kept Brookfield in their name even after the postal service forced the hamlet to change its name to Slate Hill to avoid confusion with New York's other Brookfield, in Madison County.

After the Civil War stoves provided the building's first heat. Over the next few decades, the congregation began dwindling until its last member died in 1933. But the residents of Slate Hill, mindful of the church's place in their local history, continued to hold its required annual meeting and maintain the building.

Aesthetics

The minimal, classically-inspired ornament on the church's exterior suggests an acknowledgement of the emerging tastes of the time, as the Federal style was taking shape. But the interior's use of heavy, inpainted timber and raised and paneled pews recalls late medieval English building traditions, and the pulpit in particular is of a style found in late 17th- and early 18th-century churches in New England. The Brookfield church is a very late example of a style much more popular long before the Revolution.

References


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