Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Carmel Moravian Church

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Location
  
Westmoreland

Denomination
  
Moravian

Founded
  
1827

Status
  
Church

Country
  
Jamaica

Membership
  
1587 (1903) 150 (2006)

Address
  
Jamaica

Bell
  
1

Carmel Moravian Church

Founder(s)
  
Mr and Mrs Hutchinson Muir Scott

Province
  
Jamaica Province of the Moravian Church

Similar
  
Church of the Redeeme, Trinity Moravian Church - J, Bethabara Moravian Church - J, Bluefields Beach, Old Salem Historic District

Carmel Moravian Church sits dramatically atop a hill 1.5 miles (2.4 km) west of the small market town of Newmarket in Westmoreland, Jamaica. It was founded in 1827 at the behest of a local family of planters who wished to teach Christianity to their slaves.

Contents

History

Planters Mr. and Mrs. Hutchinson Muir Scott owned properties in the area and starting in 1818 made several attempts to find a christian minister for their slaves.

Eventually, c1820, they invited Moravian missionaries to begin regular services on their estates.

A hill top site was chosen by the Scotts in 1826 and a road built up to the temporary building they had constructed there.

John Scholefield was appointed as the first minister of Carmel in 1827 and oversaw work on a new church which started the same year and was completed in 1828. It was soon found to be too small and as a result services had to be held both morning and evening to satisfy the demand. The church was enlarged in 1859 resulting in the magnificent building, 120 feet (37 m) long and 72 feet (22 m) wide at the transept, which still stands today.

Church

A cut stone and mortar structure with a large masonry belfry to the south topped by a wooden cupola and containing one bell.

A pipe organ was obtained from Germany c1895.

Manse

A 20th-century building of rendered breeze blocks with a zinc roof. Rain water was channeled by gutters from the roof to a large storage tank to the south of the building from where it was daily pumped by hand into a header tank of old oil drums and gravity fed to taps.

School

There is an infant school a little downhill to the west of the church, opposite the main entrance.

Burial ground

Running downhill to the north of the church is a small and sparsely used God's Acre of about 1,700m2.

Notable members

  • Archibald Monteith, an ex-slave who was called 'Aneaso' born in Africa, and brought to Jamaica and later wrote an autobiography.
  • References

    Carmel Moravian Church Wikipedia


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