By Bill Cherry, Dallas Broker-Realtor
My 43rd Year Selling Texas
www.billcherrybroker.com

Galveston, Texas, one of the oldest citiies in Texas, had barely been settled by businessmen and their families when they decided that slaves should have the benefit of churches of their own.
That was quite a revolutionary idea back then.
But rather than build churches for them, "masters" instead helped their slaves earn the money to buy the property and then to build the church buildings themselves.
And let me tell you, Galvestonians, both black and white, have always been proud of that unusual bit of history.
The oldest of those churches is the Reedy Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church. It was founded in 1848, and it was the first African American Methodist church in Texas.
It raised the last payment to pay its builder in 1858, by holding a church fair and cake sale. The fair raised $75.00.
At the end of the Civil War the ownership of this church was immediately transferred to its membership. The same thing happened at the Island's African American Episcopal and Baptist churches.
The Reedy Chapel AME Church burned to the ground in the Great Galveston fire of 1885, but the members rebuilt it in time for the Christmas services of 1886.
And then the 1900 storm gutted it. Again the members promptly rebuilt and reopened it for worship.
More than thirty pastors have served the Reedy Chapel AME Church. And for 155 years it has remained one of the most influential congregations on Galveston island, whether the congregants are primarily white or black.
I'm Galvestonian Bill Cherry, now a Dallas Realtor, and the contributions of Galveston's African American churches to life on the Island are among my favorite historical memories.
Copyright 2005 - William S. Cherry
All Rights Reserved
<<=====Bill Cherry's Galveston Memories Is Available at Bookstores, Barnes and Noble, and Amazon.com
Read more of Bill Cherry's pieces through his monthly column in "Texas Escapes Magazine." www.texasescapes.com
What a beautiful church, Bill. Thank you for writing about this intriguing bit of Galveston history. Such resourcefulness demonstrated by these parishioners.
I enjoy reading your blogs so much and one day I will have to visit Galveston....I'll feel like I've been there a many times
before !
Jo