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Beulah Methodist
Mark Schmidbauer Mark Schmidbauer

Beulah Methodist

Grove City’s first Methodist Church was named Beulah Methodist since it was in Grant’s new Beulah Addition. The church was surrounded with new homes. The building was modern and since there was no electric in the village, it had its own acetylene gas plant for interior lighting. Electric service didn’t come to Grove City until 1913. Adam Grant donated a double lot at Park Street and Lincoln Avenue for the church. After a major fire at Beulah Methodist Church, the congregation purchased land on Columbus Street and built the Grove City United Methodist Church. The first service was in 1958.

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Methodist Episcopal Church
Mark Schmidbauer Mark Schmidbauer

Methodist Episcopal Church

The Methodist Episcopal Church was founded in 1784 and the Ohio Conference of the Methodist Church was established 12 years later. A Methodist fellowship organized and flourished at the Highland Meeting House. Pictured is John Wesley, founder of the Methodist movement.

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First Presbyterian Church
Mark Schmidbauer Mark Schmidbauer

First Presbyterian Church

In 1856, a group of 60 left St. John’s Church to create a Presbyterian Church. Many of the early pioneers from Virginia, New York and Pennsylvania brought with them a strong tendency toward Presbyterianism. They desired their own denomination with weekly services in English. The new congregation was known as the First Presbyterian Church in Grove City. They first met in a wood plank building near the railroad tracks. Both Presbyterian and Methodist used the building. Services were interrupted by the trains which also spooked horses. That building was purchased by Adam Grant who turned it into an auditorium. (Grant’s auditorium pictured).

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St. Johannis Kirche
Mark Schmidbauer Mark Schmidbauer

St. Johannis Kirche

The first organized religious group to build their own house of worship was St. Johannis Kirche [St. John’s Lutheran Church]. Lutherans began meeting at the Highland Meeting House as a congregation in 1849. In 1853, they built a church, which is still standing at the northwest corner of Columbus Street and Arbutus Avenue. Most Lutherans spoke their native language but services were also held in English. Some of the English speaking Lutherans left and formed St. Paul’s Lutheran Church at the intersection of Columbus Street and Dudley. When St. Paul’s ceased to exist after five years, the property was purchased by St. John’s congregation where they built their current structure.

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