Members of The War of 1812 Society in Virginia participate in a Plaque unveiling at the Old Donation Episcopal Church in Virginia Beach The program: Below the Master of Ceremonies, Dr Thomas Whetstone presides



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Members of The War of 1812 Society in Virginia participate in a Plaque unveiling at the Old Donation Episcopal Church in Virginia Beach

The program:

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Below the Master of Ceremonies, Dr Thomas Whetstone presides

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Above is a photo of the wreath presenters Below is James M Green and Stuart L Butler who represented our Society



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Above is a photo of the plaque that was unveiled at the ceremony



From the website of the church is found information about the church and the important people buried there, many of which were honored in the ceremony

This is the history of Lynnhaven Parish Anglican/Episcopal Church and its people, today known as Old Donation Church. From its earliest seventeenth century beginning in a wilderness area populated by mostly Native Americans to the eighteenth century “Golden Age” with its prosperous Virginia gentry to an abandoned burned out church in the woods with no services for over fifty years, Old Donation has managed to rise like a phoenix from the ashes. 

The Church was originally established as Lynnhaven Parish Church. The word “Donation” was informally added after 1776 when the last colonial rector, the Reverend Robert Dickson donated land to the church to continue the funding of his boys’ orphanage. “Old” first appeared in the Vestry Record in 1822, when the vestry ordered that the “church called ‘old Donation Church’ be put in repair.” Old Donation is included on the National Register of Historic Places and is one of the stops on the Bayside History Trail. Today Old Donation Church stands as the oldest Episcopal Church in Virginia Beach. 

The congregation built three churches: the first completed in 1639 at Church Point (Lynnhaven Parish Church No. 1), the second in 1692 on the West Branch of the Lynnhaven River (Lynnhaven Parish Church No. 2), and the third was completed in 1736 near the second building (present day Old Donation Church). Services ended in the early 1840’s as congregants switched to the more populous Kempsville Emmanuel Episcopal Church. The abandoned church caught fire in 1882 destroying the roof and part of the walls. Thurmer Hoggard IV (1819-1902), who attended services at Old Donation as a boy organized annual pilgrimages to the Old Donation's burned-out remains in the 1890’s. Then in the early 1900’s Reverend Richard J. Alfriend (1860-1923) began holding more frequent outdoor services in good weather and in the nearby Bayside School during inclement weather. By 1913 Reverend Alfriend was able to build a small membership (after a lapse of 57 years) at the newly completed parish house built prior to the 1916 re-construction of the burned-out church. From then through the Second World War the church struggled. Ann Parks in an Oct 4, 1987 Virginian Pilot’s “Beacon” article remembered Old Donation Church in the 1920’s when Sunday services were lucky to attract twenty-five. She said the church was very poor and the women of the church made preserves to raise money. In 1953 Reverend Tucker counted just 78 actual members. When he left in 1984, the congregation had more than doubled, and by the end of 2011 the membership had grown to over 800 with as many as 400 present on Sundays, and a 100+ member day school with children ages 2 to 6. Much of the latest surge in membership can be attributed to the current Rector, Reverend Robert J. Randall. Since his leadership began in 2004, the church has seen a dozen new programs started (see “Modern Activities History – Chronology” in this article). 

Today Old Donation Church is full of life, providing abundant activities, and supporting and participating in over 20 different outside ministries. As an Episcopal Church, Old Donation Church belongs to the American branch of the Anglican Communion which has its roots in England after the time of the Reformation and break from the Roman Catholic Church. Old Donation Church retains the Catholic sense of sacraments and worship with a reformed Protestant sense about the importance and role of the Holy Scripture. 

The Reverend John H. Emmert, Rector of Old Donation Church from 1985 – 1996 wrote the following; “The Judeo-Christian tradition has as its cornerstone the belief that God works in history. God has evidently seen fit to draw this congregation along in His providential care – blessing, guiding, prodding, chastising, leading. How could the congregation be here without Adam Thoroughgood, Robert Dickson, the Hoggard family, Richard Alfriend and a host of others, known and unknown? Would God have raised up others if it had not been for these?” (References 25, 127, and 197). 

__________Milestone Dates of the Church__________ 

May 17, 1637. Captain Thoroughgood summoned Reverend William Wilkinson to hold the first services in his first home, a crude wooden structure on the shore of the Chesopean River (renamed Lynnhaven by Adam), a location on the edge of what is now Lake Joyce in Baylake Pines (Reference 1 – page 37). 

1639-1640. Upon completion of church No. 1 at Church Point in 1639, Adam commissioned Reverend John Wilson to hold services, but he died less than a year later followed closely by Adam’s own death at the early age of 36 in Feb 1640. 

Aug 3, 1640. The first Vestry is appointed. Thomas Todd and John Stratton are elected church wardens. 

Sep 6, 1667. The dreadful hurricane of 1667 struck, which would eventually cause the waters of the Lynnhaven River to erode Church Point and undermine the foundation of Church No. 1. 

Jun 1692. Church 2 was completed (to be known as the Brick Church or Mother Church). The new location was on two acres of land sold by Ebenezer Taylor, paid for in 1694 with 1,000 pounds of tobacco. 

Jul 10, 1706. A jury from the church Vestry ordered Grace Sherwood (known as the Witch of Pungo) to a trial by ducking. 

Mar 2, 1736 Anthony Walke put a motion before the Vestry “that the old church [church 2] would be a convenient place to make a public school for instructing children in learning and for no other use or purpose whatsoever.” The school was operated by the church as late as 1819. 

Jun 25, 1736. Church No. 3 (present church) was received by the vestry from Peter Malbone, the builder. 

Feb 14, 1777. Shortly after Reverend Dickson’s death his will was admitted on record donating his home, slaves, and more property to the church to be used to support and continue his free school for orphan boys in Church No. 2. The gifted property was called “Donation Farm,” but the term “Old Donation Church” did not appear until a Vestry Record entry in 1822 used that term to order that the “church called ‘old Donation Church’ be put in repair 

Oct 11, 1916. Christening ceremonies of the rebuilt church were held, a cornerstone was laid, and in it a time capsule was placed. 

Dec 19, 1926. The First Christmas Pageant was held and has been held ever since on the Sunday evening before Christmas. 

Nov 24, 1934. The First Oyster Roast was held and has been held ever since on the Saturday before Thanksgiving. 

____________________Today - Three Separate Single Story Buildings 

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-0ebyofwi_lq/tqhq-eim_di/aaaaaaaaaeu/mdtpfhnjdze/s400/church%2bmap.jpg___________A plaque in front of the Parish Offices shows locations of the three buildings. 

The Historic Church is listed as number 1 (above) and is referred to as Church No. 3 in this document since three churches were built; i.e., No. 1 at Church Point built in 1639, No 2 built in 1692 at a location between the Parish Building (noted as numbers 2-6 above) and Alfriend House, and No. 3 - the present church built in 1736. 

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-wkf3ozync4q/tqr4efup6ei/aaaaaaaaagi/xzlab3asjag/s400/church%2boct%2b2011%2b023.jpg1. The Historic Church. Old Donation Church, constructed in 1736, is a good example of colonial ecclesiastical architecture which combined elements of the first crude shelters in Jamestown with Early Georgian style. The rectangular 34 by 68 foot brick building was laid in Flemish bond, created by alternately laying headers and stretchers in a single course. The influence of Georgian architecture is evident with use of horizontal lines and rounded window headers and a slate-covered hipped gable roof. An altar and reredos are centered in the chancel with a communal rail separating the nave where the congregation is seated. Major renovations and structural reinforcement were completed in 1960 when five interior tie rods at the ceiling line were installed to stop outward wall thrust and again in 1966 after much deterioration had occurred due to termites, crumbling concrete floors, and pews that sorely needed replacement. The old floor was found to be sloped six inches between side walls causing the north wall windows to become six inches higher from the floor than the south wall windows after the floor was leveled. The 1966 renovations also included the return of the church to its original Colonial “Prayer Book” design (the 1916 rebuilding reflected the then popular Gothic chancel design) by moving the choir and organ up to the balcony, adding kneelers, and relocating the lectern and prayer desk adjacent to the pulpit. The primary focal point at the head of the church is a 9 by 15 foot high solid wood reredos, a 1916 gift from Norfolk St. Paul's Church. On it are the Ten Commandments and at its top is the Hebrew word “Yahweh” or “God.” 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-phaqwp_65cg/to5aa3esryi/aaaaaaaaayg/romvtyb1ksi/s400/church%2boct%2b2011%2b015.jpg2. Parish Building. Built between 1954 and 1991, this is a single story 15,853 square foot facility with class rooms for preschool children, a library, church offices, and a multipurpose room (Tucker Hall) for meals, services, and gatherings. 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-i38jwu3mwzs/to5arvlg1yi/aaaaaaaaayo/aybxghbyoxo/s400/church%2boct%2b2011%2b018.jpg3. Alfriends House. Built in 1957, this single story 2,422 square foot facility used to be the Rectory Residence but is currently used for Sunday School and meetings (References 5, 31, 64, and 179). 

___________________________The Land____________ 

In 1634 King Charles II of England directed the formation of eight shires (counties) in the colony of Virginia. In the fall of that same year Adam Thoroughgood, the father of Lynnhaven Parish Church, moved from Kecoughtan (today’s Hampton) to his 5,350 acre estate, on the other side of the James River, to a location beside the Chesopean River which he renamed the “Lynnhaven” after the town in England where he grew up (Grimston-King's Lynn, Norfolk County, England). He is also given credit for naming New Norfolk county, and the James River after King James I of England. In 1691 Lynnhaven Parish became part of Princess Anne County, and in 1952 Virginia Beach was carved out of Princess Anne County as an independent city. In 1963 the lands left as Princess Anne County were incorporated into Virginia Beach (References 32, 33, and 114-pg 246). 

__________________________Chapter 2 - The Chronology 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-eosqxci3dhe/tysclkinhvi/aaaaaaaaau0/fbvsxk8phcy/s400/church%2bpoint%2b008.jpgThis cross is located inside Fort Story at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay. It reads, “Here at Cape Henry first landed in America, upon 26 April 1607, those English colonists who, upon 13 May 1607, established at Jamestown, Virginia, the first permanent English settlement in America. Erected by National Society Daughters of the American Colonists April 26, 1935.” 

1607 - Anglicans and Oysters. Reverend Robert Hunt held the first Anglican service at Cape Henry in present-day Virginia Beach on 29 April, 1607. A granite cross was erected in 1935 to commemorate this historic occasion. After this first Anglican Christian service in Virginia, one of the first Anglican Christian Churches in Virginia (Lynnhaven Parish) would be built. Also of significance, these 104 men who sailed from England on the Susan Constant, Godspeed, and Discovery found natives roasting oysters and found them to be delicious. That April day would not only plant the seeds for a church, but also most likely the seeds for the Old Donation Church’s annual Oyster Roast, with both the oysters (Lynnhaven) and the church (Lynnhaven Parish) becoming celebrated. Old Donation’s yearly Oyster Roast held the Saturday before Thanksgiving, had its formal beginning in 1934, but from all indications, an informal roast goes back possibly as far as the church itself. Rufus Parks, member and later Church Lay Reader in the early 1920’s, invited Old Donation congregants to his home for oyster roasts just a mile north of the church, overlooking Witchduck Bay. He most likely inherited this tradition from his next door neighbor Senior Warden B. Dey White who had held an annual oyster roast at his estate down by Witchduck Bay, a tradition he certainly most likely acquired from C. M. Barnett (a member of the Vestry) who held oyster roasts for Lynnhaven Parish in the early 1900’s at his home (now Ferry Plantation House) near the church. And so it goes, a tradition most likely handed down from one generation to the next going back as far as that early landing party in 1607 that saw the natives roasting those famous Lynnhaven Oysters (References 16, 28, 47, 52, and 122). 


http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-0j1k_i8ehia/tmkrtafwhji/aaaaaaaaawa/ypiu_ggbdis/s400/oyster%2broast.jpg 1909 - One of many Oyster Roasts held by Charles and Stella Barnett at their Ferry Farm Plantation Home facing the Lynnhaven River. 

1634 - the Lynnhaven River. The Native Americans called the river the Chesopean. In the fall of 1634 Captain Adam Thoroughgood moved to the shores of the Chesopean and built his first crude wooden home on the river at a location that is now Lake Joyce in Baylake Pines. Mr. Floyd Painter in April 1955, while searching for Indian sites and artifacts, discovered Adam’s first wood house on Battery Road in Baylake Pines. His first house was situated a distance of about two miles from Church Point, the location of Lynnhaven Parish Church No. 1. Being from the town of Grimston-King's Lynn, Norfolk County, England, Adam renamed the river after his hometown. In 1634 the entrance from the Chesapeake Bay was not at today’s Lynnhaven Inlet, where the Lesner Bridge stands, as that location was occupied by a huge sandbar forcing the river to take a westward course. The river either emptied into the Chesapeake Bay at the edge of what is now Lake Joyce in Baylake Pines or further west at Little Creek. According to Benjamin Dey White, in his 1924 book “Gleanings in the History of Princess Anne County,” Lake Joyce formed the mouth of the Lynnhaven River. However, a map by Gen. Benedict Arnold’s engineers made in 1781 denotes the early flow of the Lynnhaven River to be two miles further west to Little Creek. Whatever the mouth of the Lynnhaven, in 1634 travel on Lynnhaven was arduous, as the first several miles of the river were quite shallow, and at Church Point, now a half-mile wide, the river was narrow. 

The story of Lynnhaven Parish Church has its roots in the Lynnhaven River. Notable people, important to Lynnhaven Parish and to local government, lived along the shores of the river, and, along with other congregants, came to church mostly in boats. When the first church foundation was eroded by the river in the late 17th century, the congregation moved their church one and a half miles up the western branch of the Lynnhaven. Folks who come to hear about the history of the church usually ask about the Church’s most infamous member, Grace Sherwood, the Witch of Pungo, who was ducked in the Lynnhaven River for witchery. The river has seen much - Native Americans, pirates, and slaves, but there could be nothing more grounded in the heart and soul of the river than the people of Lynnhaven Parish Church (References 103-f, 155, and 156). 

1637-1645. (Church No. 1). Adam Thoroughgood (1604-1640)shaped the area by leading the Lynnhaven residents in politics and in religious matters. Gathering citizens of the little Lynnhaven community, Adam Thoroughgood summoned Reverend William Wilkinson (1612-1663) to hold services in his crude wooden home on Sunday May 17, 1637. Assembling at this first service were local residences Thomas Keeling, William Kempe, Thomas Willoughby, Henry Seawell, and Henry Woodhouse. Reverend Wilkinson gave up his duties as priest less than a year later. 

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-8zmmhdvg0lq/tysez2fvjii/aaaaaaaaava/075ld3m7-4a/s400/church%2bpoint%2b006.jpgThis monument at Church Point on Spring House Trail (looking west up the West Branch of the Lynnhaven River) reads, “Church Point – 1639. Near this site Lynnhaven Parish was built in 1639. The church and its graveyard were the victims of erosion by the waters of the Lynnhaven River. Among gravestones found were those of Adam Thoroughgood and his wife Sarah, and her last two husbands, John Gookin and Francis Yardley. Presented by Suffolk Chapter Virginia Society, National Society Colonial Dames XVII Century 1995.” 

Envisioning a town at Church Point, Adam in 1638 spearheaded the construction of Lynnhaven Parish Church No.1, a glebe (rectory), and court house; and in the next year a more substantial house for his wife and four children. Because Virginia Governor Wyatt had ordered all plantation homes sitting on 500 acres or more to be constructed of brick, all four structures were most likely built with brick. A newspaper article dated July 16, 1950 states, “the first Lynnhaven church, a brick building, was erected on Adam Thoroughgood’s land at what is now known as Church Point.” Furthermore, George Carrington Mason, a church historian, noted that remains of the Lynnhaven Parish Church were still visible as a mound of brick in 1850. Upon completion of the church in 1639, Adam commissioned Reverend John Wilson to hold services, but he died less than a year later followed closely by Adam’s own death at the early age of 36 in Feb 1640. 

Seven months later on August 3, 1640, the first vestry was appointed. Those named in court minutes were Edward Windham, Henry Woodhouse, Bartholomew Hosskine, Thomas Todd, Christopher Burroughs, Thomas Bullock, Thomas Caussonne, Ensign Thomas Keeling, Robert Hayes, and John Lanckfield, along with Thomas Todd and John Stratton as churchwardens. Adam’s house(which remains standing today at 1636 Parrish Road Virginia Beach, Virginia) was completed after Adam’s death by his widowed wife Sarah in 1645. At present, a plaque commemorating the first Lynnhaven Parish Church is situated near the waterfront park at Church Point (see picture above). The Mayor and City Council of Virginia Beach have appointed May 20th of every year as Church Point Day. 

Captain Adam Thoroughgood, the Father of Lynnhaven Parish Church, and Sarah Thoroughgood-Gookin-Yeardley, the Mother of Lynnhaven Parish Church, along with their small band of English settlers, would leave an indelible imprint on the history of early Virginia Beach (References 1- pages 31, 37, and 42; 2; 19; 20; 27; 34; 52; 103c; 108; 110-page 37; 114 – pages 251 and 264; 180; and 196). 

1635-1692. Parish Survival Leads to Close Relationships. In 1635 the lands of Lynnhaven Parish were still wilderness with large tracts of land owned by each settler, most of them coming from England as indentured servants. They worked hard forging a society modeled as closely as possible to the one they had left in England, setting up the same class distinctions and Anglican traditions. Tobacco culture dominated, but most landowners produced only a small quantity as its cultivation required numerous manual operations and labor beyond that of one’s own family if more than a few acres were planted. The most successful Lynnhaven Parish planters invested their tobacco profits in additional lands and laborers rather than in pretentious life styles. Gradual prosperity would be manifested in rooms added to existing homes that began as simple two-room structures. High rates of death during childbirth and other misfortunes caused the colonists to rear large families. No widow was a widow for long as they were paraded in front of eligible bachelors and, if not by mutual attraction, they were coerced by the Lynnhaven Parish Senior Church Warden and other church members to quickly choose a new husband. History shows that every woman, except two, obliged. One was way ahead of her time in having power that few women during that period welded (Sarah Thoroughgood), and the other befell a terrible fate in the Lynnhaven River (Grace Sherwood). Therefore, by 1692 just about everyone in Lynnhaven Parish was related. 

The colonists had many hazards to overcome including wolves, nor'easters, droughts, hurricanes, floods, and intermittent pirate skirmishes. 
* Wolves were in abundance, killing many farm animals. The court ordered a bounty of 50 lbs of tobacco for each wolf killed that was soon raised to 100 lbs as the wolf population grew. 
* Native Americans. In 1639 the Native American population outnumbered the colonists by 4 to 1 with intermittent attacks by the Pumunkey and Menticoke tribes. When several plantations in isolated areas were attacked and settlers massacred, Captain Thoroughgood led 15 men against the Menticoke Indians in a harsh retaliation on July 17, 1639. 
* Pirates. The settlers in Lynnhaven Parish suffered what might have befallen the original Jamestown settlers if they had not been ordered by King James I to locate up the James River, safe from possible attacks by pirates, French, Spanish and Dutch ships. The pirate Capt. Kidd had his rendezvous on Pleasure House Creek, then part of the Lynnhaven River. The English pirate Edward Teach (1680 –1718), better known as Blackbeard, buried some of his treasure in the sands of a hill near Cape Henry. In 1669, the ship Maryland Merchant, while anchored near the Lynnhaven River was seized and plundered by an unknown vessel carrying thirty guns and a large crew. Lookouts were established along the shore for all suspicious vessels, and later all ships coming to Virginia were provided with cannon and men trained to shoot them. In 1684 the English Government furnished a ketch for the protection of the Virginia coast, but in spite of the Governor’s instruction to the naval officers to capture Capt. Kidd, he openly walked the streets of Norfolk. 
* The Weather. In 1649 a severe storm destroyed a large quantity of tobacco, but this was small in comparison to the storm of 1667. Ironically, a month before the storm, Adam Keeling, whose plantation was situated east of Captain Thoroughgood’s property just east of today’s Lesner Bridge, organized a group of people to dig a small pilot channel from the Lynnhaven River through a huge sandbar about a half-mile long to the Chesapeake Bay so boats would not have to make the long journey west to the mouth of the river. A month thereafter, on September 6, 1667, the dreadful hurricane of 1667 struck, a storm considered one of the most severe hurricanes to ever strike Virginia. The hurricane devastated the Lynnhaven area as no other storm has ever done. The 1667 hurricane lasted about 24 hours and was accompanied by very violent winds and tides. Approximately 10,000 houses were blown over. Area crops (including corn and tobacco) were beat into the ground. Many livestock drowned in area rivers due to the twelve foot storm surge. The foundation of the fort at Point Comfort was swept into the river, and a graveyard of the First Lynnhaven Parish Church tumbled into the waters. Twelve days of rain followed this storm across Virginia. This system was blamed for enlarging the small pilot channel dug the month before to the size of an inlet and re-routing the river permanently. The new channel flow eventually eroded Church Point and undermined the church foundation. Five years later during the winter of 1672-73 another catastrophe hit the small Lynnhaven Parish when an unusually severe cold spell with hail and wind killed half the small herds of cattle left from the storm of 1667 (References 1- page 32; 8; 24; 103d -page 3; 104; 105; 114 - page 259; and 145). 

1655. Witchcraft. Lynnhaven was caught up in one of darkest periods of seventeenth-century history, the persecution of witches. Women suspected of being witches were subjected to trial by water. The earliest known accusation of witchcraft in Lynnhaven Parish showed up in a court order of May 23, 1655. Ann Godby was ordered to pay 300 pounds of tobacco for slander for accusing Nicholas Robin’s wife of witchcraft (Reference 1- page 59). 

1689-1755. Chapel-Of-Ease Churches. These crude church buildings were built within the bounds of Lynnhaven Parish for the attendance of those who could not reach the Lynnhaven Parish church conveniently. The first Eastern Shore Chapel-of-ease was built near present day First Colonial Road on a bank of the East Lynnhaven River. This chapel-of-ease and others to follow were served by "duly licensed" clerks. Eight chapel-of-ease churches were built: Seawell’s Point (1642), Elizabeth River (1666), 1st (1689), 2nd (1726), and 3rd (1755) Eastern Shore, and 1st (1692), 2nd (1739), and 3rd (1774) Pungo. Of the eleven churches built (eight chapel-of-ease and three Lynnhaven Parish churches) only one original building is standing today, i.e., Old Donation Church. When the 3rd Eastern Shore Chapel was condemned and disassembled in 1952, the congregation built a new Eastern Shore Chapel on Laskin Road, conforming as much as possible to the blueprints of the old structure (References 21, 44, and 114 pages 243-252). 

1692-1695. Church No. 2 is Built. By 1692 tides and severe storms pouring in through the open channel near the church had caused the lands around the church to erode. First the cemetery collapsed into the river, followed by the undermining of the church foundation. Instead of rebuilding near the same location, the congregation decided to move from the mouth of the Lynnhaven River and the Chesapeake Bay further up the Lynnhaven River for a number of reasons: (1) movement of the population center further up the Lynnhaven River, (2) lack of protection from the British Navy against pirates, (3) Native Americans raids, and (4) severe storms. The vestry approved the building of a new church (Lynnhaven Parish Church No. 2) which was completed in June 1692 (to be known as the Brick Church or Mother Church) but not before the Lynnhaven River overcame Church No. 1. Services had to be held elsewhere for a little less than a year. The new location was on two acres of land sold by Ebenezer Taylor, paid for in 1694 with 1,000 pounds of tobacco. No. 2 was situated on the West Branch of the Lynnhaven River at the end of Cattail Creek (Cattayle Branch on old maps) in a location adjacent to Ferry Plantation known as Church Quarter. Church No. 2, built by Jacob Johnson, was specified to be 45 feet in length and 22 feet in breath between walls with a 13 foot ceiling and wainscot pews. A large rock with a brass plaque stands at the doorway of the Day School (Parish Building) telling about the history of Church No. 2. (References 2, 52, and 1- pages 36 and 39). 

1735 - On January 3rd, just as five hundred colonists anchored in Lynnhaven Bay, a storm arose and the ship was driven ashore. Two-thirds either drowned or froze to death. 

1695 - 1750. The Courthouses. The association between the colonial church and courthouse was always very close, and they were frequently built on adjoining sites. Adam Thoroughgood started the town of Lynnhaven with a church (church no. 1), a Glebe [rector’s house], and a courthouse. In 1660 a second courthouse was erected on Thomas Harding’s plantation at Broad Creek off the Eastern Branch Elizabeth River, and in 1689 the justices authorized the construction of two more courthouses, one in the town of Norfolk. For the other, Adam Thoroughgood’s grandson, Argall, obtained a court order for it to be built on Edward Cooper’s land near the first Eastern Shore Chapel. Then after Lynnhaven Parish Church No. 2 was completed in June 1692, in accordance with custom, the Eastern Shore Chapel Court House was torn down and moved by boat adjacent to Church No. 2. This courthouse, in which the famous Grace Sherwood was adjudged a witch, was torn down in 1735 to make way for construction of Lynnhaven Parish Church No. 3, and was rebuilt a mile away at Ferry Farm Plantation (References 1- page 36, 44- page xiii, 52, 74-page 109, and 155). 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-tmqhci6yiuo/tyfubqheeai/aaaaaaaaasw/n-pb7_egvdo/s400/odec2-1.jpgJune 2011 - At Feast Day, the 275th anniversary celebrating the completion of Church 3 (the current church), members of the Historic Traditions Committee dress in period costumes representing each of the four centuries the church has been in service. 

1733-1736. Church No. 3 is Built. On November 13, 1733 the vestry ordered the Brick Church (No. 2) be abandoned and Church No. 3 built. This entry in the vestry records probably does not imply that services could no longer be held in the Brick Church (as they did until March 2, 1736) but simply that the Brick Church had reached a “dilapidated state” for a congregation that had progressed in wealth and social status. The new church, 628 sq ft larger than Church No. 2, was received by the vestry from Peter Malbone, the builder, on Friday, June 25, 1736. The three years it took to build Church 3 was in part due to the fact that the bricks were sent from England and the timber was hand hewn from trees felled near the spot. There is a brick to the right of the front doorway with the date inscribed (References 73 & 6-pgs 274-276). 

1736-1776. The Church Prospers. The eighteenth century was referred to as the “Golden Age,” a time of prosperity and economic growth. Lynnhaven Parish Church served as the “Mother Church” of a rich and aristocratic parish exclusively from English ancestry making up almost half the population, with a quarter of the population being slaves and a quarter Native Americans. Tobacco was king, and horseback riding and fox hunting were the predominant sports. The church prospered under the Reverend Henry Barlow (serving for 18 years) and then Reverend Robert Dickson (serving more than for 27 years). During this colonial period Lynnhaven Parish Church was more of a social institution than a religious one, and Sundays provided the occasion to socialize and transact business. Services were long and held only every other week as some had quite a distance to travel, the fastest way being by water. Being part of the Church of England, Lynnhaven Parish Church was supported by taxation, and the church vestry set tax rates and collected the money, usually in the form of tobacco. Beginning in the 1730’s Presbyterians and Baptists began to protest the tax and steal away poorer church members into their primitive churches while railing against the easy life of the Lynnhaven Parish Church gentry. By the 1760’s a number of Lynnhaven Parish Church members found themselves in debt due to their luxurious and extravagant way of living (References 65 and 41- page 248). 

1776–1856 – Demise of the Church. After the Revolutionary War (1783) the Protestant Episcopal Church of the U.S. took the place of the Church of England. With the British government no longer welding its Anglican authority over Americans, the church lost its tithing tax and the practice of younger sons entering the ministry or purchasing a commission in the army or navy. Without the protection of English church laws, new denominations drew people away from the Episcopal Church, and since there were no longer any bishops in the colonies to fight for the church, Princess Anne County confiscated some of the county's oldest historical Episcopal church properties after the church membership had faded away. 

After Reverend Dickson (1776) stepped down, Lynnhaven Parish Church had no regular ministers for 45 years and subsequently church membership began a slow decline and the building deteriorated. On November 28, 1821, at a meeting chaired by Thurmer Hoggard (the first entry in the vestry records since 1813), the Reverend Robert Prout was elected rector and long overdue repairs commenced. Lynnhaven Parish Church with a membership of about 80 was still the center of Protestant Episcopal worship in Princess Anne County, but for the next 35 years, Princess Anne’s population center gradually shifted to Kempsville on the banks of the Elizabeth River, a far superior channel over the silting up Lynnhaven. On March 11, 1843 Reverend John G. Hull was forced to resign because of his failing health, but so entirely devoted was he, congregants refused to accept his complete resignation and insisted that he continue by going from house to house. Despite poor health, not only did he travel the distances between large farms, but he also managed to help build Emmanuel Church in 1843, a little brick church in Kempsville, and by 1856 Emmanuel Church had drawn away the remainder of the Old Donation’s Church congregants. Old Donation Church (name changed in 1822) Vestry Minutes closed with a notice of a meeting held in March, 1856 when William P. Morgan, John S. Woodhouse, Solomon S. Keeling, AG Tebault, and William C. Scott, qualified as vestrymen, signed the minutes for the last time. 

In 1855 Author Bishop William Meade (1789-1862) wrote about the former and vibrant Lynnhaven Parish, “Our Prospects in this parish are now and have been for a long time discouraging. Formerly this was one of the most flourishing parishes in Virginia. Many circumstances have occurred to promote its declension. In my early youth I remember to have heard my parents speak of it as having what is called the best society in Virginia. The families were interesting, hospitable, given to visiting and social pleasures. The social class, the rich feast, the card-table, the dance, and the horse-race, were all freely indulged in through the county. And what has been the result? I passed through the length and breath of this parish more than twenty years ago, in company with my friend, David Meade Walke (1800 – 1854), son of the old minister of the parish (Reverend Anthony Walke), who was well acquainted with its past history and present condition, and able to inform me whose were once the estates through which we passed, and into whose hands they had gone; who could point me to the ruins of family seats which had been consumed by fire; could tell me what were the causes of the bankruptcy and ruin and untimely death of those who once formed the gay society of this county. Cards, the bottle, the horse-race, the continual; feasts, - these were the destroyers. In no part of Virginia has the destruction of all that was old been greater. But let us hope for better things, and strive for them by the substitution of honest industry for spendthrift idleness, of temperance for dissipation, of true piety for the mere form of it. Some excellent people, doubtless, they always were. Their number has increased of late years. Some have I known most worthy of esteem. May God strengthen the things that remain, though they seem ready to perish!” (References 6-page 284, 9, 41-pages 249- 252, 46, 115-page 69). 

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-nge1grlq7ic/txi4lcvsoqi/aaaaaaaaare/ehfosltztxo/s400/odec%2bbefore%2b1900.jpgChurch 3 is depicted here prior to the 1882 fire and sometime after 1767 when the side door was moved about eight feet from the end of the long south wall to its present location. The entrance narthex and side sacristy were added during reconstruction in 1916. 

1882 - The Fire. Abandoned for services in 1856 the church fell into a state of disrepair. Finally the sides buckled and the roof caved in. Then a woods fire burned most of the church in 1882. The roof and part of the walls were destroyed (Reference 195). 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-_dwd2tr1ocw/tui2lo1nfmi/aaaaaaaaamw/w0o3nnga8cs/s400/people%2bin%2bruins.jpg1901 – Congregants pose for a picture after a memorial service in the ruins of Old Donation Church. Standing in the foreground are Licia Williamson and Dr. F.C. Steinmetz (Rector of Christ Church). From left to right in the background are Lulie Sharpe, Reverend J. Alfriend, (unknown), Mary Wilson Hoggard, Benjamin Dey White, Fanny Hoggard, Dr. David W. Howard, and (unknown). 


http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-w2b76l3dxzw/tmkr551qkii/aaaaaaaaawi/ivmf_zqnhxc/s400/church%2b1910.jpgThis picture was taken sometime before the church was rebuilt and is a view of the north front corner. Stables used by past parishioners remained and can be seen in the rear of the church. 

1882-1912 - Rescue of the Church. The Commonwealth of Virginia passed a law that churches and chapels formerly owned by the Church of England and not used within a calendar year reverted to the ownership of the Commonwealth. After the vestry held their last meeting in March, 1856, there was so much love for the abandoned old church that different folks from Emmanuel Episcopal Church made annual pilgrimages to the church to hold services. This might have included Reverends John G. Hull, Lewis Walke and N. A. Okerson, and possibly others. In 1882, after the fire had all but destroyed the church, Reverend Thurmer Hoggard IV (1819-1902) took over this responsibility. As a loyal Episcopalian and young man he had worshiped at Old Donation in the early 19th century and kept alive a dream of restoring Old Donation. After Hoggard’s death in 1902 his son and two daughters Mary and Fannie Hoggard continued annual services. Shortly afterwards Reverend Richard J. Alfriend (Oct. 1 1860 - Jan. 6 1923), a lay reader from Kempsville Episcopal Church, built on the Hoggard family’s success by continuing these annual services until 1912 when he was ordained as Rector (References 1–page 95, 44, 75 and 255). 

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-xc4ddepocak/tqhsaxkrdti/aaaaaaaaaeg/nz4lyqfepmu/s400/alfriend.jpg________________________________ Reverend Richard Alfriend 

1912-1916 - The Church is Rebuilt. Reverend Richard Alfriend began to build a new congregation as plans for restoration of the burned out church got underway. Mrs. Jeb Stuart, widow of the famous Confederate general, started the building fund with a donation of one dollar. Even before re-construction commenced, Reverend Alfriend led the small congregation in services on the church grounds in good weather and in nearby W.E. Biddle School during inclement weather (located near the intersection of Independence Blvd and Haygood Rd). Sometime in 1913 a saw mill was erected near the ruins of Old Donation, and huge trees that had grown up within the walls of the church were cut up and the lumber used to build a parish house and horse sheds (where Tucker Hall now stands). The below picture dated 1913 shows the parish house with two cars and two buggies (one hitched to a horse) in front. 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-m-2cwf37eoc/to0lamhuaxi/aaaaaaaaayi/umq9dwqptiy/s400/parish%2bhouse%2bin%2b1913.jpgAfter the erection of the parish house in 1913 services were held regularly indoors. By 1914 membership had grown to 50. Through the enthusiastic and tireless efforts of Reverend Richard Alfriend and Judge Benjamin Dey White, Senior Warden, plans went forward for reconstruction. Slade, C. M. Barnett, a member of the Vestry, and Judge White secured the necessary $7,000 when they traveled to New York in 1915 to borrow money from bankers. Mr. Barnett had connections there as his business was the shipping of the famous Lynnhaven Oysters to New York’s Waldorf Astoria Hotel and Grand Central Station. By May 15, 1916, at a re-consecrated or dedication ceremony, repairs were well under way and completed October 11, 1916 when the Church’s cornerstone on the northeast corner was laid. On May 15, 1918, the church held a consecration ceremony after the notes to the bankers in New York were paid off. Included in the rebuilding of the church was the addition of the narthex (10 by 12 foot vestibule entrance) and sacristy (16 by 14 foot services and storage area for altar vestments, linens, and other essentials for communion). One can tell the 1736 bricks from the new bricks by the color on the outside of the church. The restoration included a large chancel area around the altar for the choir, the only Gothic characteristic. The choir would be relocated 50 years later to the balcony. Four stone plaques on the walls of the church honor those members who worked to restore the church, i.e., May Etta Belle Fentress, George H.H. Woodhouse, Josiah Woodhouse, William Etheridge Biddle, B.D. White, M. Absalom, W.S. Fentress, S.F. Slade, C. M. Barnett. Included are the architect, J.W. Lee and builder, C. O. Sherwood (References 1-pg 96, 2, 3, 35, 52, 60, 61, & 64). 

1916 - The Cornerstone and Time Capsule. At christening ceremonies of the rebuilt church on October 11, 1916 the cornerstone and a time capsule were laid. The gleaming white cornerstone of Old Donation Church hidden in the azaleas at the northeast corner of the old church has this inscription: 
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-ihlfkrxgcf8/tqhtr0rnzmi/aaaaaaaaaes/pxkkuhbhcl0/s400/corner%2bstone.jpg[Note] The 1694 date is incorrect and should read 1692. Confusion arose from the fact that the deed (Deed Book 1, page 68, Virginia Beach Circuit Court) transferring the property clear of debt to the Lynnhaven Parish Church Senior Warden Eban Ezer Taylor was dated September 5, 1694, two years after construction was completed. 

The Ancient Free & Accepted Masons were invited to conduct the service. At the appointed time, the freemasons (possibly Judge White) began the ritual. Complete with elements of wine (the Wine of Refreshment), oil (the oil of Joy and Gladness) and corn (the corn of Nourishment), the participants followed the elaborate and formal readings. At the setting of the stone, the following passage appears: “Most Worshipful Master: It has ever been the custom of the craft on occasions like the present to deposit within the cavity within the foundation stone certain memorials of the period at which it was erected. Has such a deposit been prepared? It has been prepared and placed within a sealed box. You will read a list of the contents of the box. You will superintend and see that the box is deposited in the place prepared for its reception.” 

We know about one of the items in the time capsule from an entry in a notebook (one of a number of valuable documents, a copy of which is maintained in the Old Donation Library) by Richard J. Alfriend, Rector, and dated October 11th, 1916. “The cornerstone of Donation Church was laid by the Masons of Princess Anne Wednesday, October 11th 1916. In preparing the various records of interest – to be placed in the Stone the writer thought it only just to put in same a short sketch of one who was a faithful member of the parish of Lynnhaven, Lay Reader, and representative in the Diocesan Council for 60 years – Mr. Thurmer Hoggard late Senior Warden, Born 1819 – died 1902. This contribution to his relics placed in the box of this Sepns is offered in gratitude for the love friendship shown the writer by this godly churchman. Mr. Hoggard from his earliest youth, besides his interest in State & County affairs (he was at one time County Treasurer) showed a deep and pious interest in the affairs of his church of Old Donation. At the early age of 23 he was appointed Lay Reader (owing to the failing health of the Rector, the Reverend Mr. Hull) by the late Bishop Meade. At this time he was elected by the Vestry as a delegate to the Diocesan Council of Virginia, and represented his Church in the Councils faithfully for 60 successive years.” 

The time capsule remains buried inside the walls of Old Donation Church for future folk to discover. The old term “sepns” relates to items separated from the time of placement until uncovered in some distant and far off time (Reference 3). 

1916-1929 - the Church Struggles. Rufus and Diana Parks joined the church just after the 1916 reconstruction. Their daughter Ann (May 11, 1917 - Jun 21, 2002) recounted in an Oct 4, 1987 Virginian Pilot’s Beacon article “Old Donation Church Still a Quiet Island of Beauty” her memory of growing up in the church in the 1920’s. “There wasn’t any electricity or running water. But they had a Christmas pageant that drew people from far and wide the week before Christmas.” Ann recalled that the church was heated by coal stoves, two in the church and one in the Sunday school. “Sexton John Wilson would go over there and spend Saturday night and fire up the stoves so they would be warm in the morning.” She remembered the community and church life. “There were only country roads and all down Independence Boulevard. There were only farms – six, I believe. We were lucky if we had 25 in the congregation. And if we didn’t go every Sunday we’d get a call to see if we were sick. The church was very poor and women would meet every month and pickle and preserve to raise money.” 

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-vaswdue5yje/tml_5r2tbmi/aaaaaaaaaw4/3mwjvf3nwoy/s400/sep%2b6%2b007.jpg1923 - Bell Tower. The church’s bell tower was erected in 1923. There was a bell tower or lychgate at the entrance to the cemetery (no longer standing). Bodies were placed here before being taken into the church for funeral services. (Reference 134). 

1957 - The Rectory. A Rectory was built (Alfriends House) and the Reverend Beverley D. Tucker, Jr. was the first to reside there. Today the building is used for meetings, offices, and storage. 

1954-1991 - The Parish House. Construction of the Parish House took place in four phases. 
* 1954 - Phase One. A Christian Education building was constructed and completed in 1954. The original building had a large meeting area with fewer walls which were put up later for church offices. This is a 98 by 33 foot (3,100 sq ft interior space) single story brick building with a gable roof. After completion, the old frame parish house located where Tucker Hall now stands was torn down and donated to another small church, which hauled its lumber away in a truck (Reference 3). 
* 1961 - Phase Two. A Day School was attached to the south side of Phase One, an 86 by 69 ft (4,735 sq ft) single story brick building, flat roof with double door opening to a 36 by 29 ft (1,044 sq ft) court yard surrounded on three sides by rooms and open to the east. 
* 1969 - Phase Three. Rooms were added to the south side of the Day School which exits onto playground, a 70 by 46 ft (3,000 sq ft interior space) single story brick building with flat roof. 
* 1991 - Phase Four. A multipurpose room with a room divider and three large storage areas was named Tucker Hall, for the Reverend Beverley Tucker (40 by 70 ft or 2,691 sq ft interior space). Also included in this last phase were the kitchen and two bathrooms (53 by 34 ft or 1,715 sq ft), library and hallway extension (29 by 23 ft or 615 sq ft interior space) connecting Tucker Hall and the Day School to then completely close off the east side of the courtyard, and bricking in the porch to the front of the Day School for five additional Day School rooms (69 by 10 ft or 612 sq ft interior space). 

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-rxagbsau6nc/ty8lxyq1hai/aaaaaaaaav8/pjr27n7ltrg/s400/rods.jpg_____________Five steel tension rods inserted to keep the walls from buckling outward 

1960 - Major Structural Repairs. During an Easter service conducted by Reverend Beverley Tucker, when Ruth Ann Campbell was playing as church organist, the walls and roof began to separate, creating a gap between the stairs to the organ loft and the wall. The church was “condemned” by the county building inspectors. Major structural repairs were made to the roof structure and brick walls to include five steel spanner bars (visible today inside) to anchor the brick walls and prevent outward thrust from the gabled roof. During this 1966 restoration, Reverend Beverley Tucker stated that the original brick work on the south wall was uncovered, and the holes and shadows of the hanging box pews of early wealthy parishioners were exposed. Today no sign exists of these repairs and restorations except for the five steel rods overhead. A prominent Norfolk banker and descendant of the Reverend Alfriend, John Alfriend, arranged for his bank, the National Bank of Commerce (a predecessor of the old Virginia National Bank), to lend the repair money without a mortgage (deed of trust) on Old Donation. Reverend Beverly Tucker stated that the banker did not want a mortgage secured by a church in which his ancestor, the Reverend Alfriend, was buried (References 2 and 3). 

1966 - More Repairs. Although major repairs to the roof and walls were made in 1960, the rest of the church was in a serious state of disrepair. The concrete floor was cracking and sinking in the nave area (central part of a church, extending from the narthex to the chancel), and the wood floor in the chancel area (space around the altar) was termite-eaten; the plaster on the side was falling; and the pews (a second-hand addition in 1916) needed replacing. These deficiencies were corrected with re-furred, re-plastered and re-painted walls, termite treatment, and a new slate floor. New lighting, heating, and air-conditioning systems were added. To bring the church back in line with its original Colonial “Prayer Book” architecture (the 1916 rebuilding reflected the then popular Gothic chancel design) and add more space, the choir and organ were relocated from the chancel up to the balcony, kneelers added, and the lectern and prayer desk relocated adjacent to the pulpit. The Architect, Milton Grigg, estimated the cost at $45,000 (Reference 48). 

1986 – The Driveway and Parking Area. Up until this time this area was dirt and gravel with muddy potholes after a rain. Asphalting this whole area was a significant improvement. Sometime later a large oak tree standing in the middle of the driveway in front of Tucker Hall had to be felled. A large circle in the asphalt is visible where the tree once stood. 


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