The
first English settlers arrived on St. Simons Island under the leadership of
James Oglethorpe in February 1736. In March, the Reverend Charles Wesley,
MA, who also served as Secretary for Indian affairs and Chaplain to General
James Oglethorpe, entered his ministry at Frederica. From 1736 until 1766,
services were conducted by John Wesley, George Whitfield and other clergy
appointed by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel.
The Wesleys and other ministers were ordained
clergymen of the Church of England, by whom the Episcopal Church in the
United States was nurtured. After the return of the Wesleys to England, the
evangelical revival led to the emergence of the Methodist Church, in which
John Wesley had the principle role. Three of the most outstanding religious
leaders of the 18th Century were associated with the the establishment of
the church on St. Simons Island.
In 1752, the trustees surrendered their Charter to
the King and Georgia became a Royal Colony. In 1758, the Province was
divided into parishes and Frederica and St. Simons were designated St. James
Parish.
Following the Revolutionary War, the descendents of
early settlers petitioned for a charter and were incorporated by act of the
State Legislature on December 22, 1808 as THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN THE TOWN
OF FREDERICA, called Christ Church. Land from the town of Frederica was also
GIVEN, GRANTED AND SECURED TO AND FOR THE USE AND BENEFIT OF THE SAID
EPISCOPAL CHURCH. The first church on the present location was erected in
1820 and the congregation worshipped in it until the outbreak of the Civil
War.
The Reverend Edmund Matthews, DD who became rector
of Christ Church, Frederica in 1810, was one of three clergymen comprising
the Primary Convention for the organization of the Diocese of Georgia in
1823.
The Reverend Anson Green Phelps Dodge, Jr. rebuilt
Christ Church, Frederica following its destruction during the Civil War, as
a memorial to his first wife Ellen. The Church was consecrated on the Feast
of the Epiphany, 1886 by the Reverend J.W. Beckwith, DD Bishop of Georgia.
In addition to establishing an endowment for Christ Church, Frederica, Anson
Dodge also built and endowed the Anson Dodge Home for Boys (closed in 1956)
and established the Georgia Missions Fund for the support of missionaries
and teachers in certain counties of the Diocese.
The present church building is cruciform in design,
with trussed Gothic roof. Stained glass windows, given as memorials,
commemorate the life of Christ and the early history of the Church on St.
Simons Island. The Font was given to Christ Church, Frederica by the Sunday
School of St. Thomas Church in New Haven, Connecticut in 1884. Part of the
Credence Table and an inset in the present altar are from the altar of the
original 1820 church.
In Christ Church yard are buried former rectors of
Christ Church, the families of the early settlers and of plantation days.
Also buried here is the first Georgia State Historian, Lucian Lamar Knight.
The oldest gravestone discovered in the yard dates from 1803.
Courtesy of Christ
Church, Frederica