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In the fall of 2011, the First Presbyterian Church
(formerly the First United Presbyterian Church) of Oak
Ridge celebrated its 66th anniversary. For almost
two-thirds of a century Presbyterians in Oak Ridge have
gathered to worship God; study the Bible and educate youths
in Christian principles; comfort the lonely, ill, and
bereaved, enjoy the fellowship of each other; help
refugees, prisoners, victims, and the needy; and serve the
community and the world. Over the years the church
established a strong reputation for its bold and principled
stands on important issues (such as racial inequality), its
excellent music programs, and its commitment to community
and international service.
In the Beginning
In the mid-1940s a few pioneering families struggled to
form a Presbyterian church in a unique city, a 20th-century
"frontier" town whose activities were restricted by
military regulations. Older members today recall fondly
that the early church services were held in a gym; the
choir sat in the bleachers and the minister stood under the
basketball goal, which some called a halo over his head.
But our church's history goes back even farther than
that.
After 1942 when the Oak Ridge area was selected by the
Federal Government as a site for the secret development of
atomic energy as a weapon of war, organized religion had to
keep pace with an exploding population (which peaked at
75,000 people before declining to about 28,000 residents).
To help establish places of worship for church groups, in
1943 the U. S. Army built the East Village Chapel and the
Chapel on the Hill in what is now the city of Oak Ridge. At
the time there were already 16 churches on the tract of
land purchased by the government.
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The Chapel on the
Hill
as completed in 1943 |
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| The Chapel on the
Hill in 2011 |
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On July 24, 1943, a Presbyterian (U.S.) minister
conducted the first formal church service held in Oak
Ridge. The Reverend B. M. Larson of Knoxville led a service
at the Central Cafeteria for 154 persons who had formed a
liberal organization of Christians from many denominations
called United Church. In October the United Church group
found a home in the Chapel on the Hill. Also worshiping
there were Baptist, Episcopal, Methodist, Jewish, and
Lutheran groups that had previously held informal services
in public schools, theaters, homes, and recreational
buildings.
Many Presbyterians in the new community attended the United
Church; however, a group of 12 women who had belonged to
the First Presbyterian Church in Morristown, Tennessee,
organized a circle in Oak Ridge and maintained their
affiliation with the Morristown church. As other
Presbyterians joined this group, the women drafted a
petition that asked the Knoxville Presbytery of the
Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS, or
"Southern" Presbyterian Church) to form a church in Oak
Ridge. Because a member of that presbytery was pastor of
the United Church, the petition was turned down.
The group, aided by Holly Hornbeck, a member of Second
Presbyterian Church of Knoxville, then petitioned Union
Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church in the United States
of America [PC(USA)] to form an Oak Ridge church. In
response to this petition, the PC(USA)'s Board of National
Missions sent parish worker Elizabeth Kelly to survey Oak
Ridge and determine whether a Presbyterian Church was
needed. Her survey led to positive results: on June 6,
1944, the Union Presbytery organized a Presbyterian
Fellowship in Oak Ridge, which became the First
Presbyterian Church of Oak Ridge on June 10, 1945, with the
Reverend E. F. Dalstrom, pastor of the Shannondale
Presbyterian Church of Knoxville, as "stated supply"--
temporary, part-time minister until a full-time pastor
could be found. In 1947 the Board of National Missions sent
another parish worker, Dorothy Neal (now Mrs. C. P. Duggan
of Knoxville) for the Oak Ridge church's summer
programs.
The Presbyterians of the new church first met Sunday
afternoons in the East Village Chapel; in the fall of 1944
they moved these services to the Chapel on the Hill. During
the war, church space was very scarce in Oak Ridge so
services were scheduled in shifts. The Presbyterians met on
Sunday afternoons after the Lutheran service and before the
Episcopal service. Because the Army required that each
denomination have at least 35 persons in attendance at
their services to keep their time slot, worshipers
sometimes took their children out of Sunday school and had
them counted as adults to meet the quota. In November 1944
the Oak Ridge Presbyterians met for their first fellowship
meal--a Thanksgiving dinner at the Arkansas House, a former
chapel at the corner of Arkansas Avenue and Oak Ridge
Turnpike.
Women played an important role in starting and organizing
the church's outreach programs. Organized efforts on the
part of women to serve the community and the world through
the local church began December 7, 1945, when the first
official meeting of the Women's Association of the First
Presbyterian Church was held (it was organized with the
help of the Women's Association of the Second Presbyterian
Church of Knoxville). The Oak Ridge group was called the
Women's Society until September 1952, when its name was
officially changed to the Women's Organization.
In its early years the Women's Organization (which was
divided into circles) was particularly active in sending
money and parcels of clothing and other needed items
overseas and in providing assistance to the all-black
Scarboro School (such as giving books to the library,
staffing health clinics, and helping out at school
parties.) In June 1945, for example, women from our church,
five other white churches, and three black churches
cooperated in operating the Scarboro Vacation Bible School
for black children. The group was also active in
contributing time and money to the Scarboro Day Nursery,
which was started by the United Council of Church
Women.
Women were also given opportunities to exercise power in
the church. Anna George Dobbins, the first woman officer or
ruling elder, was elected by the congregation; she began
her service in 1950.

A New Church: The Bob Thomas Years
On June 1, 1946, the Reverend Robert L. Thomas became the
first pastor of the church. He was formally installed on
June 18, 1946. On August 24, 1946, he conducted the
church's first wedding (between church members Gardner
Smith and Anne Clift) at Chapel on the Hill.
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The Rev. Bob
Thomas
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it |
The second wedding was held on September 26, 1946.
Shortly thereafter, church services were shifted to Sunday
mornings at Pine Valley School. The church school groups
met at 9:30 a.m. in the various classrooms, and the church
services were held at 11:00 a.m. in the school's
gymnasium-auditorium. Although the use of school facilities
was an improvement over the old arrangement, there were
several drawbacks. The school could not provide space for
church meetings during the week, so the Sunday school
teachers and students had to put everything back exactly as
the school teachers had left it. The church services lacked
a worshipful atmosphere, especially with the basketball
goal hanging like a halo over the preacher's head,
bleachers for the choir, and a large "No Smoking" sign in
the background. Nevertheless, church members tolerated
these conditions for a while. About five months after this
move, the church became self-supporting and no longer
received aid from the national church's Board of National
Missions.
In September 1947 Mrs. Louise "Sug" (for Sugar) Cavett was
hired as the church's first full-time secretary.
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| Bulletin - April
1947 |
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it |
She worked in the church's temporary office, a
rented room in Town Hall on Kentucky Avenue in Jackson
Square. Church secretaries succeeding Sug Cavett were June
Johnson Cathcart, Dee Lines, Louise Taylor, and Mary Kerr
Pigeon (who later was named office manager), Vickie Seaton
and Elizabeth Bentley, the current office manager.
Sug Cavett, one of the eight charter members of the First
Presbyterian Church, was often called the "pillar" of the
church. As secretary, she made daily morning visits to
church members and others in the hospital. She pinned a
rosebud on the pillow of each new mother from the church.
She also taught Sunday school. She was loved for her
compassion, her wisdom, and her hearty laugh. She died in
Chattanooga in 1979.
From the beginning, church members felt an acute need for
their own buildings. As a result of meetings between
officials of the government and local churches, lots had
been assigned to various churches. The Presbyterian lot was
to be at the northeast corner of Broadway and Georgia
Avenues. However, no arrangements had been made to allow
the churches to buy or build on these lots.
In 1947 the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) succeeded the
Army as custodian of the Oak Ridge land and nuclear
facilities. One of the AEC's first moves was to hire a
contractor--Skidmore, Owens, and Merrill--to draw up a
master plan to be used in the orderly development of the
community of Oak Ridge. Because of the inadequacy of the
lot originally assigned to the Presbyterians, another lot
was assigned. After considerable study and negotiations,
this assignment was changed to a 2.4-acre lot on the corner
of Oak Ridge Turnpike and Lafayette Drive, site of the
present church.
In August 1949 the church leased this land from the AEC.
Later the AEC allowed the church to buy the land; however,
the deed contained a restriction stating that if the land
were used for anything other than church purposes, it would
revert to the government. After the present sanctuary was
built, it became obvious that additional buildings were
needed. So the Presbyterians purchased additional land from
the AEC in 1952, bringing the current holdings up to seven
acres.
The Church Buildings
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| Outside Appearance
Sketch |
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| 1950 Proposal
Floorplan Sketch |
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| Construction -
February 1951 |
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| Finished - April
1951 |
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When it was clear that land could be obtained, the
church's ruling Bodies--the Session and trustees-- began
making plans to build. The church elders hired architects
Barber and McMurray of Knoxville to design the sanctuary
and investigated means of financing the building. Because
the original land was leased and then, when purchased, had
a deed with a restriction on its use, and because of the
uncertain future of Oak Ridge, obtaining a long-term loan
was considered difficult. The Session, therefore, decided
to limit the size of the sanctuary building to one that
could be financed by the congregation (through bond sales,
for example) with assistance from the Board of National
Missions. This decision dictated that the building should
be designed to have maximum space at a minimum cost.
The sanctuary building's design was semi-modern with
Spanish influence. It was intended to fit in with the
permanent architecture in Oak Ridge. Construction by the
Rentenbach Engineering Company of Knoxville began on the
new church following groundbreaking services on July 16,
1950. On April 15, 1951, the Reverend Bob Thomas conducted
the first service at the new church sanctuary; his sermon
was titled "Divine Dissatisfaction" and the church bulletin
referred to the church "at the heart of the Atomic City."
The church sanctuary was dedicated on April 29, 1951. The
final cost of the cement-block building was $85,000.
However, from the first Sunday (April 15, 1951) that it was
used for worship services and church school, the new
building was extremely crowded. During the time between the
groundbreaking and dedication for the sanctuary, church
membership had grown from 550 to 600 people. This
fast-growing congregation, however, was united, full of
vitality, and tolerant of the new building's flaws, which
were soon corrected.
On September 13, 1953, the congregation authorized the
church trustees to build the first unit of the Christian
Educational Building.
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| Tenth Anniversary
Bulletin - June 1956 |
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enlarge |
In 1954 the Educational Building was constructed to
meet the need for an expanded church education program. The
building was also used for community activities and group
meetings. For example, the Oak Ridge unit of Recording for
the Blind held meetings there, including an open house on
September 29, 1957. In May 1972, the church held a
corporation meeting and approved leasing of the Educational
Building to Child Enrichment, Inc., a weekday child-care
corporation owned by Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Smith of Oak Ridge.
Thus, the Educational Building housed the Jack and Jill Day
Care Center from 1973 to 1981.
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| The Sanctuary in
1956 |
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| The Sanctuary in
2011 |
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The year 1956 saw staff changes at the church. In
July 1956 Joan Dudney was hired as the first full-time
director of Christian Education. Shortly after she married,
Joan Dudney Smartt resigned (on August 31, 1957). In
September 1956, the Reverend Thomas resigned to accept a
pastorate in Dayton, Ohio. Dr. Benjamin B. Lavender, former
president of Washington College Academy and a Knoxville
resident, came to the church as the stated supply until the
pulpit could be filled.
Bob Thomas was a popular minister who is remembered as
amiable, devout, and zealous. He was known as the informal
visiting minister because he would frequently visit
parishioners at their homes and help them with their
chores. He was also a fine organizer and an effective
recruiter of church members, bringing the congregation to a
peak level of 1000 persons. Attendance during the worship
service was so high that chairs were placed in the aisles
next to the pews to accommodate the large numbers; this
practice was discontinued a few months later when city fire
marshals declared it unsafe. The demands for Christian
education were also high; the minister's wife Mary Lib
Thomas helped out, volunteering as a virtual director of
Christian education. At one time the Women's Organization
had 10 circles, and the Men's Fellowship, which started in
May 1951 and met monthly, had attendances as high as 125.
During Mr. Thomas's pastorate, Boy Scout and Cub Scout
Troops were started and sponsored by the church. Also, the
first black couple (the Woodburys) joined the church. In
general, the congregation was united and extremely active
and looked forward to continuing this way under a new
minister.
Because of the rapid growth of the congregation under Bob
Thomas, the Union Presbytery decided that Oak Ridge needed
a second Presbyterian church. Oak Ridge is long and narrow,
so the presbytery felt that the Oak Ridge church could
adequately meet the needs of the people on the east end of
town but not those to the west. Thus the presbytery
purchased a lot for a new church at the west end of Oak
Ridge. However, no church was ever built there mainly
because church members on the west end were reluctant to
move from the present church, even to help establish a new
one.

An Activist Ministry: The Sam Howie
Years
Following the departure of Mr. Thomas, the church members
then called Dr. Samuel E. Howie from the Highland
Presbyterian Church, Fayetteville, North Carolina. Born
April 27, 1901, in Mecklenburg County in North Carolina, he
lost both parents when quite young and was raised in Barium
Springs Orphanage from the age of 6 through high
school.
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The Rev. Sam
Howie
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Dr. Howie graduated from Union Theological Seminary in
Richmond, Virginia. He was ordained on June 27, 1928, by
the East Mississippi Presbytery. He served as pastor of the
Presbyterian churches in Pontotoc and Tupelo, Mississippi,
and in Memphis, Tennessee, and Fayetteville, North
Carolina. He was also director of public relations at
Southwestern College in Memphis. He was first president of
the Memphis Interracial Council. He was installed as pastor
of the Oak Ridge church on May 12, 1957.
One of the first things Dr. Howie did was to establish the
position of treasurer. He recognized that the accounting
system in use was not adequate. It was a single-entry,
cash-basis system that did not cover other assets such as
land, buildings, and special funds and that did not
recognize depreciation as an operating expense. Knowing
that church member John Reeve was a certified professional
accountant, Dr. Howie asked him to install a modern
accounting system. Reeve and Dick Rush set up a
double-entry, accrual accounting system, which has since
been computerized by Rush, now deceased. It produces
monthly accounting reports for Session to better manage the
church's business activities. When the new accounting
system was started, Dick Rush became church treasurer.
Reeve and Rush took turns being treasurer from 1957 to 1966
when Dick Rush was elected to the Oak Ridge School Board.
In the 1970's, Anna George Dobbins served as treasurer,
with Ralph Knight as her assistant. Rush returned to the
position of treasurer in the early 1980's and held the job
with distinction until he died inn the late 1990s. David
Mullins is now the treasurer.
Three notable church events occurred in 1958. On May 28,
1958, the First Presbyterian Church of Oak Ridge became the
First United Presbyterian Church as a result of the union
of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. and the United
Presbyterian Church of North America. On June 15, 1958,
Gordon Ripper became the church's director of Christian
Education. A native of Pennsylvania, he was a graduate of
Carson-Newman College and had taught in Oak Ridge public
schools. He had an office in the Education Building. He
took a leave of absence in September 1962 to pursue
graduate studies in Christian education at Scarritt College
in Nashville. He resigned from the Oak Ridge position on
July 1, 1966, to assume a position at First Presbyterian
Church in Decatur, Alabama. On August 16, 1958, church
members Julian Crowell and his wife left for Pakistan on a
mission trip. He taught physics at Gordon College,
Rawalpindi, as an educational missionary sponsored by the
Board of World Missions of the United Presbyterian Church,
U.S.A. His wife's parents were also educational
missionaries in Pakistan at the time.
Shortly after his ministry started, Dr. Howie decided that
he needed help in dealing with a congregation of 1000
people. After thinking this problem over, Dr. Howie
concluded that the church needed a co-pastor
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The Rev. Alex
Stewart
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rather than an assistant pastor. After some
correspondence between Dr. Howie and Dr. Eugene Carson
Blake, the stated clerk of the General Assembly, it was
decided that co-pastors were legal for a church under the
Presbyterian form of government. The Session of the Oak
Ridge church called the Reverend Alexander M. Stuart as
co-pastor. He began his service with the church on October
2, 1960.
Sam Howie's directness and aggressiveness were most
prominent in the area of social concerns. When he came to
the church in 1957, the civil rights movement was under
way, and he had already demonstrated activism and
dedication to the rights of minorities. In Oak Ridge Dr.
Howie strongly advocated taking actions to persuade owners
of businesses that black people should have the same rights
as white persons. He was one of the primary leaders in
organizing the Oak Ridge Federation for Equal Public
Services, a group of church representatives and other
citizens who set out to break down barriers against serving
blacks in local theaters, barber shops, and restaurants. In
July 1960, for example, the Session's Committee on Social
Education and Action sent church members cards to be given
to businesses from which they purchase services. Each card
read: "Please accept my assurance that businesses which
serve all the public equally will receive my continued
support and patronage."
Dr. Howie was also active in early efforts to provide
better housing for blacks in Oak Ridge. He served on the
board of directors of Oak Ridge Hospital and the Oak Ridge
Mental Health Center, and he was active in the Planned
Parenthood Association of the Southern Mountains. He served
as moderator of the East Tennessee Presbytery (and earlier
the East Mississippi Presbytery), and he was chairman of
the East Tennessee Presbytery's Committee on Theological
Education.
Because he was a liberal theologian, because he
participated in the civil rights movement, and because he
encouraged his congregation to participate in efforts to
racially integrate businesses, Dr. Howie was controversial.
However, few people left the church because of his
civil-rights activism; the segregationists who had belonged
to the church in the early 1950's had already departed the
church to form new churches in response to the
anti-segregationist stand taken by the PC(USA).
On May 14, 1964, Mr. Stuart, then vice moderator of the
local Union Presbytery, was attacked and injured during
participation in a Presbytery matter. He, along with the
Reverend Geddes Orman, the stated clerk of Union Presbytery
and pastor of Norwood Presbyterian Church in Knoxville, and
the minister of First Presbyterian Church at Knoxville
College, were sent to Camden, Alabama, to check on some
black churches in Alabama. Because the Knoxville College
minister was black, he stayed with friends because he did
not think the Camden hotel where his colleagues planned to
stay would give him a room. After word got out that Mr.
Stuart and the Reverend Orman had come to Camden with a
black man, the two white ministers were attacked in their
hotel room by a white man about 40 years old who mistakenly
thought the men were civil rights workers. (This event
occurred about a year after the Selma, Alabama, protest
march during which a Unitarian minister was killed.) Mr.
Stuart was severely beaten with the barrel of a shotgun; he
suffered a broken right arm and multiple bruises on his
left arm and leg and had to spend a week in Oak Ridge
Hospital following his escape from Camden. His story made
front-page news in the Knoxville News-Sentinel; the
headline was "Pastor Tells of Alabama Beating." He was
invited to tell his story at the June meeting of the
General Assembly in Oklahoma City.
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Josephine
Jeffress
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it |
During this time, Josephine Jeffress served as
parish visitor, greeting newcomers and introducing them to
other members, delivering groceries to the homebound, and
visiting sick members in the hospital and at home.
Dr. Howie retired December 31, 1966, and was elected pastor
emeritus by the congregation. He had received numerous
honors including a doctor of divinity degree from
Presbyterian College and a plaque that recognized him for
distinguished communal leadership from B'nai B'rith and
Beth Israel Congregation in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
He is remembered in Oak Ridge as a social activist who
tried to raise the social consciousness of church members
by quoting the text, "Faith without works is dead." An
editorial in The Oak Ridger lauds Sam Howie, saying
that he "has left a very definite mark on the religious
life of Oak Ridge" and that "...the kind of participation
he felt necessary for him and his church...were essential
elements in the substantial progress that the nation and
community has made in...sensitive areas" such as improved
race relations.
Dr. Howie and his wife Emma Lee moved to Raleigh, North
Carolina, where she died in August 1969 and where their son
John Howie was a practicing psychiatrist. Dr. Howie moved
to Topeka, Kansas. There he showed his concern for homeless
children by serving as executive director of The Villages
in Topeka. This project of Dr. Karl Menninger (a famous
psychiatrist who was once a member of the Topeka church of
Dr. Robert Crothers, later pastor emeritus at our church)
was a prototype for communities across the country because
it gave homeless children a normal home with cottage
parents in charge. Dr. Howie oversaw the completion of five
cottages before he died of an aneurysm on April 10,
1974.

New Ventures: The Alex Stuart Years
Following Dr. Howie's retirement, Alex Stuart took over the
full responsibility of the pastorate. One of the first
tasks undertaken by the Session under the Reverend Stuart's
leadership was the drafting of a position paper in April
1967. In this statement of the Oak Ridge church's
theological position, the authors wrote, "Our national
church is probably neo-orthodox. This church is
theologically liberal. . .The sole requirement for
membership in this church is confession of faith in Jesus
Christ. We view this confession as an act of faith that
does not depend for its validity on confession of beliefs
in various ideas about Jesus Christ. Each member must come
to his own understanding of faith and must justify his
system of belief only to himself." In the statement about
the church's mission and implementation, the authors wrote
that the church should pay attention to the problems of
racial relations and rural poverty. "Race prejudice has
been called a 'stain on the American soul,' and few
violations of the 'Law of Love' are more flagrant than
deliberate discrimination against a man because of the
color of his skin. Secondly, Oak Ridge is, literally, an
island of affluence in the midst of poverty so abject in
some cases as to cast serious doubts on the morality of our
affluence. Thus, we are in a strategic position and have a
compelling duty to study and understand the nature and
causes of poverty and . . . bring an end to this state of
human degradation."
In the late 1960's, a new Activities Building was
constructed. It was designed by a University of Tennessee
architectural student, who was employed by the
architectural firm McCarty, Holsaple, and Associates of
Knoxville. Members of the committee who oversaw the design
and construction were Joe Tittle, chairman; Wayne Clark,
Anna George Dobbins, Ken Haythorn, and John Reeve. Ground
was broken for the building on August 25, 1968.
Despite its austere appearance when completed in 1969 (some
called it Fort Calvin after John Calvin), this building has
been an extremely useful structure. Ministers have liked
having the office on the second floor so they can have some
privacy for study and sermon preparation.
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Activities
Building
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it |
The rooms on both floors are easily accessed
because they each have a door to the outside. The building
has allowed the church to provide meeting space for
racially integrated groups in the community when space for
such meetings was not widely available in Oak Ridge; this
concept grew out of Sam Howie's ministry. It has been used
not only by the congregation, but also by many community
groups including the Childbirth Education Association, the
National Organization for Women, the American Association
for University Women, Boy Scouts, the Prisoner's Aid
Society of Tennessee, Maryville College, Roane State
Community College, and Friends of Oak Ridge National
Laboratory. More recently, it has housed the offices of
Tennessee Citizens for Wilderness Planning and Aid to
Distressed Families of Anderson County.
In the late 1960's an innovative program was started under
Mr. Stuart--the ecumenical vacation church school in
Scarboro. It was planned and staffed mostly by members of
the church. Many of the black children in the community
attended.
In the fall of 1968 the church joined three others--St.
Mary's Catholic, St. Stephen's Episcopal, and United
Church--in establishing a Coffee House for young people who
needed a place to gather, talk, and relax. The initial
location was in Grove Center near the high school and
swimming pool. The Coffee House offered food, soft drinks,
and entertainment for all Oak Ridge teens needing a place
to exchange ideas and concerns.
By 1971 the Coffee House was sponsored solely by First
United Presbyterian Church. Every Friday night from 100 to
300 teens would meet at the Activities Building. At least
seven adult chaperones attended and served as "listeners,"
particularly for young people with problems. A board of
nine youths and nine adults operated the Coffee House. The
participation of young people in operating the Coffee House
increased their sense of responsibility. The presence of
many adult chaperones willing to provide informal
counseling helped troubled youth and those not attracted by
traditional youth programs. Many people praised the Coffee
House. In an editorial in the January 13, 1971, issue of
The Oak Ridger, the Coffee House was called "a very
significant success" because it provided "a recreational
and social outlet for a sizable group of local kids." In
1975 the Coffee House program was transferred to the
Unitarian Church of Oak Ridge.
From Two Ministers to a Stated
Supply
The anti-war sentiments aroused by the presence of the U.S.
troops in South Vietnam had caught hold of many church
members by the end of the 1960's. On March 17, 1968, the
church presented the one-act play "The Milestone" by James
Posten. This anti-war play depicted a scene 16 years
following a hypothetical nuclear war. The presentation of
the play was endorsed by the Session, and 14 church members
were involved in planning and producing it.
By June 1969 Mr. Stuart realized that the congregation was
too large for him to minister to alone, so the Session
decided to hire the Reverend John Minear as an assistant
pastor. Mr. Minear was ordained to the gospel ministry and
installed as assistant pastor on October 12, 1969, in our
church. Like Mr. Stuart, his theological views were
liberal. Mr. Minear, however, was less formal in his
approach to his parishioners. He was a guitar-playing
minister who appealed to the youth of the church.
In late 1970 Mr. Stuart's request that Mr. Minear's status
be upgraded from assistant minister to associate minister
was approved.
Between July 1972 and March 1973 both ministers accepted
calls from other churches. Mr. Minear accepted a call to a
church in Rockwood, Tennessee. Mr. Stuart became an interim
minister for one year at a church in Plantation, Florida.
He then returned to Tennessee as a psychiatric chaplain
from 1974 through 1992 at Lakeshore Mental Health
Institute. Now retired, he lives on Eagle Bend Road in
Clinton.
Mr. Stuart had been pastor at the church for almost 13
years, one of the longest times for an Oak Ridge minister.
He was deeply involved in social problems outside the
church like his mentor Dr. Howie, and he suffered for his
willingness to help others, as shown by his severe beating
in 1964. Shortly after Mr. Stuart's resignation, The Oak
Ridger praised him as a pioneer "in Oak Ridge in
organized efforts to break down racial discrimination in
all areas of the city's life--the churches, commercial
establishments, housing." It credited him for the Coffee
House and its service to the city's young people. It
editorialized, "We are grateful to Mr. Stuart for his many
accomplishments for the city and surrounding area, through
his willingness to enlarge his ministry to include the
concerns of many more than just his parishioners."

The Bob Crothers Years
At the direction of Union Presbytery, the church accepted
Dr. Robert R. Crothers from the Presbyterian Church's New
York City headquarters as the stated supply.
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| The Rev. Robert
Crothers |
Dr. Crothers' ministry started July 8, 1973, and
lasted until his retirement on December 31, 1977. The
ministry of Dr. Crothers was quiet and conciliatory. He
soothed the spirits of the members, calling on them and
offering counsel. Several church officers' and family
retreats were held at Walden Creek. Dr. Crothers kept up
the Social Concerns seminars for church members dedicated
to social action; he himself was an active leader in the
local chapter of the Mental Health Association.
Community concern about prisoners at the Brushy Mountain
State Penitentiary in nearby Petros was aroused by a series
of articles on life in the prison in The Oak Ridger
by church member Maria Schenck, daughter of Josephine
Jeffress. Leaders from the church's Social Concerns
Commission were instrumental in organizing Prisoners' Aid
Society of Tennessee (PAST) in 1971. The first
organizational meeting was held at the church and the
second was at the Oak Ridge Civic Center. Church members
elected to the first PAST board were Robert Clausing (then
Social Concerns Commission chairman), James Bresee, Cleland
Johnson, E. G. Richardson, and Alexander Stuart. Several
church members provided items for Brushy Mountain State
Prison and visited prisoners, helped the families of
prisoners, and organized Christmas parties.
 |
Jim
Allen
|
| Click photo to enlarge |
In 1973, Jim Allen was hired as the church organist.
Toward the end of Dr. Crothers' ministry, the Session
formed a Risk Evangelism Committee as part of a national
church-wide program. The Committee worked on improving the
appearance of the church's interior, urged church members
to form "extended families," coordinated the stitching of
banners that commemorate church confessions throughout
history, and sponsored the Festival of Banners, which was
held on February 5, 1978. A banner service has been held
periodically ever since. Key contributors to the banner
project were Lenore Matsubara, Louise Fowler, and Dale
Hadden, who also was active in Christian education and
social concerns (such as the Hunger Fund started in the
1990's).

The David Horne Years
In December 1977 Dr. Robert Crothers was elected pastor
emeritus and David. L. Horne was called to be minister of
the church. Mr. Horne and his family moved to Oak Ridge
from Indianapolis on March 1, 1978. In May 1978 the
Reverend Horne was awarded a Doctor of Ministry degree from
McCormick Theological Seminary.
 |
The Rev. David
Horne
|
| Click photo to enlarge |
On May 13, 1978, the Reverend Jim Stuart, the chaplain at
Maryville College, told the congregation that First United
Presbyterian Church was no longer looking inward and
struggling to reestablish itself but had stabilized and was
moving forward and outward again. Young families began to
visit the church and responded favorably to the church's
ministry and programs. Josephine Jeffress (who died in
1984) continued to be instrumental in persuading visiting
families to return and later become members.
 |
Arlene
Crawford,
Music Director |
| Click photo to enlarge |
Arlene Crawford was hired as the music director May 7,
1978. She would remain in that position for 31 years.
The Christian education program was rebuilt in the late
1970's and early 1980's, and it has continued to thrive to
date. Educational programs at the church had been strong
before the conflicts of the early 1970's. However, they
fell into disarray by the mid-1970's because many families
had left the church and few children remained. By 1979,
more young families had joined the church and a program for
children and youth was needed.
On March 1, 1979, Vicki Fogel Mykles was hired as
coordinator of Christian Education. Ms. Mykles put together
a strong program by concentrating on one aspect at a time.
First, she built up the teenage programs. Next, she tackled
the children's programs, then the summer programs, and
finally the adult education program.
 |
| Vicki
Mykles |
| Click photo to enlarge |
Ms. Mykles studied Greek, Hebrew, and other subjects under
Dr. Horne's tutelage. On June 20, 1982, Ms. Mykles was
ordained and called as our church's assistant minister. She
was the third female minister to be ordained in Oak Ridge
and later, when she was elected president of the Oak Ridge
Ministerial Association, she was the first woman to hold
this post. After her ordination, she continued to
coordinate our Christian Education program, give occasional
sermons and lead adult classes. She resigned in September
1985 to move to Fort Collins, Colorado, where her husband
Don has become a full professor of biology at Colorado
State University.
After her departure, Ms. Mykles served for a year and a
half as interim associate pastor for the Community Church
of the Rockies in Estes Park, Colorado. In the spring of
1986, she joined the program resource staff of the Boulder
Presbytery and worked there until January 1995. In the fall
of 1986, the Mykles' son Christopher was born. In 1989-90,
she was interim associate pastor of First Presbyterian
Church in Fort Collins. Then she became editor of the
newsletter of the Synod of the Rocky Mountains. For the
General Assembly she was a member of a team to design adult
curricula and she was a member of the Advisory Committee
for the News. She wrote several articles on Tom Sutherland,
a Fort Collins resident and Presbyterian church elder, who
was held hostage for six years in Beirut, Lebanon. The
Mykles were in Germany when Sutherland was released in
November 1991, and Ms. Mykles interviewed him and wrote
articles that were published in Presbyterian News,
Presbyterian Survey, and the Ministry Magazine of the
Uniting Church in Australia.
The program that she had directed continued to thrive for
the next eight years with the help of Ms. Joy Smith in
1986-1987 and Ms. Florence Lutz in 1990-1993. Ms. Smith
helped Dr. Horne with the Christian education program for
Columbia Theological Seminary. Ms. Lutz became our director
of Christian Education in July 1990 and she remained in
this post until October 1993. One of her interests was
starting a program for single people.
The church continued to be committed to social justice and
other issues of social concern. Several outreach programs
were started during Dr. Horne's ministry. In May 1980 the
church sponsored its first refugee family-a Vietnamese
refugee family brought to Oak Ridge by the Church World
Services organization. [The church's first refugee
experience was in the fall of 1957 under Dr. Howie when it
sponsored a Hungarian refugee, John (Janos) Torok, as a
student at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville; he had
formerly attended the University of Budapest and then,
under the auspices of Church World Services, Warren Wilson
College, where he learned English.] A volunteer committee
coordinated by Kaye Sigmon found a home for the Binh Phat
Nguyen family of 11 and helped to tutor family members in
the English language. In 1982 the family left Oak Ridge for
California. Since their start in Oak Ridge, all 9 children
obtained college educations.
The refugee sponsorship inspired many people in the church
to work together and helped them realize the power of their
church in solving difficult problems. Refugee sponsorship
has continued to be a periodic endeavor. In September 1986
the Refugee Committee under the leadership of Powell
Puckett and Jane Hayden helped brothers-in-law Dariusz
Chwiedz and Wojiech Berecki, both of Poland, to temporarily
settle in Oak Ridge. Because of their previous experience
with automobiles, Dariusz and Wojiech quickly obtained work
in the service department of a local automobile dealership.
Their English proficiency was improved in night classes. In
1987 Darius and Wojiech resettled in Hartford, Connecticut,
where each was able to help their families immigrate to the
United States.
In August 1988, a Refugee Committee led by Herb Krause and
Jane Hayden helped Bayou Aba from Ethiopia to temporarily
settle in Oak Ridge. Bayou was able to obtain service work
in a local supermarket and later in several restaurants
before leaving the area. At the time of our last contact he
was pursuing an education at Tennessee Technical University
majoring in chemical engineering.
In August 1993, during the interim pastorship of the
Reverend John Stuhl following Dr. Horne's departure, a
Refugee Committee headed by Connie Book and Gretchen Foster
sponsored the 7-member Kurdish family of Ashak Hormiz, who
had became refugees during the turmoil in Northern Iraq
following the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Ashak was employed as
an unskilled laborer locally by Phyton Technologies, Inc.,
and by the Humphrey Engineering and Construction Company,
which was hired to renovate our sanctuary starting in
October 1993. The Hormiz family moved to California in
January 1994. In each case the Refugee Committee mobilized
church members to contribute household appliances, food,
money, and time to help the refugees in the United
States.
In another example of the church's outreach programs to
improve the quality of life in the community, a forum was
held on the need for low-income housing in Oak Ridge.
Conferences on other subjects of social concern, such as
child abuse, have also been held at the church. There have
been numerous other examples of the dedication of
individual church members in the area of social
concerns.
Missions and Missionaries
In the early 1980's the church sponsored several missions.
A young church member, Ray Knight, became a Volunteer In
Mission from June 1980 to September 1981 at the Las Vegas
Campus Community Ministry in New Mexico. He performed many
services at Highland University, including saying morning
devotionals on television, conducting seminars, and
providing transportation. He also counseled Hispanic people
about draft registration and suicide prevention and tutored
those for whom English was a second language. After this
service was completed, Ray went to Puerto Rico to teach
English as a second language. In 1993 he was teaching
English at the University of Puerto Rico in Mayaguez while
working to satisfy the requirements of a Ph.D. degree in
English. He later married a Puerto Rican woman and is
teaching in Puerto Rico.
In 1983 the church supported the medical mission in Akobo,
Sudan, of local surgeon and church member Dr. Robert
Dunlap, who had done previous missionary work in Pakistan
in the 1960's and in Bangladesh in 1979. Some money for the
mission came from a benefit concert by the adult Chancel
Choir, to whom Bob Dunlap had contributed significantly as
a composer, bass singer, and arranger of hymns. Since this
time Bob Dunlap has made many medical mission trips to
African countries. In the 1990's, Bill and Judy Young
represented our church as missionaries in Ghana. In 1995
Session agreed to send the Youngs $1500 to purchase a
vehicle.
In 1982, during the World's Fair in Knoxville, the church
offered lodging to youth groups from churches around the
country in exchange for a modest fee or work at our
church.
In 1983 Katie Jeffress, daughter of Maria Schenck,
granddaughter of the late Josephine Jeffress, and a student
at Union Theological Seminary, became a candidate for the
ministry under the care of Presbytery of Union in
Tennessee. She also spent a summer at the Oak Ridge church
working as an intern.
Another relative of Maria Schenck, Edgar P. (Sonny)
Shackelford, grew up in the Oak Ridge church and became our
church's first ministerial candidate. He was ordained to
the ministry in our church on November 5, 1961, five months
after he graduated from Union Theological Presbyterian
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. He worked in Korea and
Columbia, South Carolina as a chaplain.
In 1993, Dvera Hadden, who also grew up in the Oak Ridge
church, began attending McCormick Theological Seminary in
Chicago and became a candidate for the ministry under the
care of the Presbytery of East Tennessee. She gave her
first sermon in the Oak Ridge church on Christmas Eve in
1994.
For three successive years the Union Presbytery sent
representatives of the Oak Ridge church to the General
Assembly meeting as commissioners. The representatives were
Dr. Crothers in 1982, Dr. Horne in 1983, and a layperson,
Alden Matsubara, in 1984. In 1984 Matsubara also was
elected moderator of Union Presbytery and a chairperson of
the General Assembly Committee on Peacemaking and
International Relations. However, it should be noted that
one of the earliest church members elected as a delegate to
the General Assembly was Bob Lafferty, who wrote the first
history of the church.
In 1983 the United Presbyterian Church in the United States
of America, with which the first United Presbyterian Church
of Oak Ridge had long been affiliated, merged with the
Presbyterian Church in the United States (the Southern
Presbyterian Church). One effect of the merger on the local
church was that its name reverted to what it had been
before 1958, First Presbyterian Church. After the merger
the local church became a part of the Presbytery of East
Tennessee, a constituent of the Synod of the Living
Waters.
In 1985 the church started a new project with the help of
other churches. It was one of the six churches that
organized the Ecumenical Storehouse, which is staffed by a
group of local churches and provides pick-up and delivery
of household items for needy people in the Oak Ridge area.
Since its inception, the church has continued to support
this program financially through its benevolence budget and
by providing the staffing volunteers for 2 months of the
year.
In 1986 two church members were charter members of the
board of directors of the Anderson County Center for
Community Justice (ACCCJ), which operates mediators to
bring victims and offenders together so that offenders can
make amends for the harm they have done their victims. The
church continues to support VORP's alternative justice
program through donations and volunteer efforts. For
example, Gretchen Foster and Lenore Matsubara were charter
members of the ACCCJ board, Luther Agee was a board
officer, Carolyn Krause was an ACCCJ board member and
publicity manager, and Ginny Dunlap was a mediator.
In 1987 our church helped to establish, support, and
provide office space for Aid to Distressed Families of
Anderson County. The purpose of this organization is to
coordinate and help provide aid to distressed families from
other participating groups (including United Way). ADFAC
supplies direct help and/or refers the family to other
sources; in effect, it acts as a clearing-house for other
helping organizations. This process ensures that the people
who need help will get it. ADFAC was able to help more than
500 families in its first year. Currently, the church has
dedicated several rooms of the Activities building for
ADFAC office space. More recently, church members Dick
Clark, Wayne Clark, David Mullins, Myrick and Rebekah Bell
have served as officers and board members of the ADFAC
organization.
In 1989, three senior high youths joined the Presbytery
Mission Trip to Mexico. In addition to the weekly Christian
study on Wednesday evenings, the Faith and Fellowship group
sponsored a Korean orphan and gave support to a variety of
local projects through ADFAC. In 1990 five senior high
students joined the Presbytery Mission trip to Pawley's
Island, South Carolina. The youth helped repair damage to
an elderly woman's home caused by Hurricane Hugo.
In 1991 a number of senior high youth journeyed to the
Mississippi Delta for a Habitat for Humanity mission trip
sponsored by the Presbytery. In 1992, two of our youth,
Lydia Hadden and Evan Horne, were chosen from our
Presbytery to attend the National Youth Triennium at Purdue
University; in 1995, Susanna Drake was selected to go
there. In August 1994 twelve youths led by Elizabeth
Andrews and Steve Krause traveled to Kayenta, Arizona, and
taught Bible school to Navajo children in a church
there.
The church became a sponsor of the Oak Ridge Christian
Singles Ministry, organized by Florence Lutz and the pastor
of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church. The Reverend Helmy Kades
from Egypt spent five weeks at the church as a Synod
Ecumenical Visitor; his presence contributed to our
understanding of the Christian Church in the Middle
East.
As for 1978-2001 benevolent giving, First Presbyterian
Church financially supported numerous educational and
social organizations. Recipients included Warren Wilson
College, Maryville College, Ecumenical Storehouse, Scarboro
Day Care Center, Oak Ridge Ministerial Association,
Knoxville College, University of Tennessee (Knoxville)
Presbyterian Center, Contact Teleministries, Victim
Offender Reconciliation Program of the Anderson County
Center for Community Justice, refugee projects, Ulster
Project of Oak Ridge, the Habitat for Humanity
organizations in Morgan/Scott Counties and in Anderson
County, Prenatal Clinic in Anderson County, the YWCA Family
Resource Center, Knoxville Global Mission Festival, Court
Appointed Special Advocate, and several world and local
hunger programs.
The early 1980's saw other important changes. Heat pumps
were installed to heat and air condition the sanctuary
building, replacing an aging hot-water heating system that
had an oil-fired furnace. In 1988 the remainder of the heat
pump notes used to finance the heat pump upgrade were
called in.
The Educational Building, which had been the home of Jack
and Jill Day Care Center from 1973 to 1981, was turned back
to the church, which resumed using the second floor for
church school classes. In its earliest days this center
helped to satisfy the shortage of day-care facilities in
Oak Ridge and to provide supplementary income from a
little-used facility. The closing of Jack and Jill occurred
at a time when numerous other day-care facilities had been
started and at a time when the church was beginning to need
more classroom space for the expanding youth Sunday school
classes. After Jack and Jill closed, the Montessori Center
of Oak Ridge also rented space in the Educational Building
(during the regular school year) for a couple of years for
some classes until they obtained a permanent home. Finances
went from deficit budgets in the early 1980's to balanced
budgets by the mid-1980's.
In 1986 many of the business aspects of the church were
revolutionized by the acquisition of our first computer.
Although the personal computer (PC) revolution made
possible by the invention of the single-chip microprocessor
started more than a decade before, the low availability of
useful computer software for churches and the relatively
high price of PCs delayed their introduction into the
church's operation. The church purchased an IBM PC clone, a
dot-matrix printer and software (costing less than a few
percent of the operating budget) as a result of the
initiatives of Dr. Horne, office manager Mary Pigeon, and
Planning Commission Chairman Carolyn Krause. A computerized
accounting system was developed that greatly simplified and
improved the weekly record keeping of offerings for the
church from each member.
The acquisition of word processing software also expedited
the production of a monthly church newsletter (usually
about 8 pages) called The Banner since 1988 (the
idea for its name was proposed by Mary Pigeon). This
newsletter includes announcements, profiles of new members,
newsworthy items from the commissions and committees of
Session, and messages from the pastor and staff. This
vehicle for improving intra-congregational communication
continues today in a greatly expanded size sometimes
reaching 24 pages. The church's computer hardware and
software have been continually upgraded.
In 1985 Carolyn Krause researched and wrote a history of
the first 40 years of First Presbyterian Church in Oak
Ridge. The history covered the period of 1945 through 1985.
Although many records were difficult to locate, she
interviewed many of the church's founding members to obtain
their recollections of significant church activities and
people. She also relied on Bob Lafferty's early history,
newspaper clippings, and Session records. Two hundred
copies of this history were distributed to members and
friends of the church. The history was last updated in 2011
for the church website. The church operating policies were
also revised to make them more accurately reflect the
actual operation of the church and the provisions of the
amended Constitution of the Presbyterian Church
U.S.A.
In 1986 the Planning, the Property and Maintenance, and the
Finance Commissions started work to assess the church's
physical plant needs over the next 5 to 10 years. The
Membership and Human Resources Commission, based on a
proposal of Buster Hawkins, originated the
"dinners-for-eight" program where groups of eight meet
monthly in each other's homes; about 50 people
participated. In 1992 the program was extended to the
"dinners-for-eight-out" option where a subgroup meets
monthly at different area restaurants. The Wednesday night
dinners and programs were also restarted. An annual
progressive dinner for church members interested in
offering their homes and food was held in the 1980's and
early 1990's.
In 1988 the church began using the Celebrate curricula, the
first Christian education courses to be produced by our
united denomination. The Faith and Fellowship group for
adults began meeting on Wednesday evenings; it was
disbanded in 1992. Regular visitations to homebound church
members were initiated.
The "Second Step" campaign led by Beth White and Pauline
Becraft raised $34,000 to help support the hiring of DCE
Florence Lutz and to pay off debts from the previous year.
The success of the campaign showed that our congregation
can respond generously to meet specific needs.
Renovation and Renewal
In 1991 the Planning and the Property and Maintenance
commissions began developing a plan to renovate the
sanctuary building. More extensive plans, including
building plans developed during 1987-88, were scuttled due
to the cost.
 |
| The
Hymnal |
| Click photo to enlarge |
Copies of the new Presbyterian Hymnal were
purchased and put into service in 1991. In 1994 Arlene
Crawford, director of music, instituted the "Hymn of the
Month"; each month she presented information on an
unfamiliar hymn from the new hymnal in The Banner
and bulletin and then had the congregation sing it during
the worship service.
In April 1992, the church again held a highly successful
fund-raising effort called the Bicentennial Mission and
Building Fund Campaign. Many churches under the umbrella of
the Presbyterian Church (USA) also held a local campaign
around this time to commemorate the bicentennial
anniversary of Presbyterianism in America. Our church under
the leadership of Dr. Horne and Carolyn Krause, Planning
Commission chairman, had set a number of long-term goals
for 1988 to 1993. Two congregational goals that had not
been met in 1992 were major renovation of our deteriorating
40-year-old sanctuary building and the commitment of 20% of
our church's operating budget to benevolence giving. The
Session set a pledge goal of $300,000 to be given over 3
years to meet these two important goals. The proceeds would
be used for renovation and benevolence in an 80-20% split,
respectively. The Session decided that, of the $60,000
raised for mission, $45,000 would go to the national
Bicentennial drive, including at least $20,000 for projects
in Pakistan and $15,000 for local benevolence projects to
be determined by the congregation. The Pakistan projects
included assistance to renovate dilapidated living quarters
at an excellent women's Christian school, Kinnaird College,
and the purchase of a vehicle for the community health
program of Pakistan's Sialkot Hospital. Dr. Bob Dunlap and
his wife Ginny were aware of the needs of these
institutions when both spent a number of years in Pakistan
while Bob was a medical missionary at Sialkot in the
1960's. The local Bicentennial Mission and Building Fund
campaign committee, headed by Beth White and Luther Agee
and guided by Dr. Horne, worked under the direction of Dr.
William Crosland from the national church office in
Louisville, Kentucky. It succeeded in obtaining $305,000 in
pledges!
The Renovation Committee, co-chaired by Herb Krause and Dan
Terpstra, was formed in February 1992 to recommend specific
sanctuary renovations and to oversee all activities
required to implement actual renovations. The committee
consisted of a five-member steering committee and several
ad hoc subcommittees and chairpersons. The subcommittee
system was designed to empower the congregation to make all
renovation recommendations. Four subcommittees were formed
in April to brainstorm, evaluate ideas, and specific
renovations for the sanctuary exterior, interior,
handicapped access and kitchen. More than 40 different
people regularly contributed their energies, ideas, talent
and time (in excess of 3000 total person-hours) in regular
meetings open to all congregational members between May and
October.
 |
| The 1990
Proposal |
| Click photo to enlarge |
The church's selected architectural-engineering
firm, Cooper and Perry Inc., of Knoxville, began developing
preliminary designs based on the subcommittee
recommendations. In addition to the co-chairs, the Steering
Committee consisted of Luther Agee, Dick Clark and the late
Fred Stout, who each had professional experience in the
design, planning and management of building projects. The
Exterior, Interior, Access and Kitchen Subcommittees were
co-chaired by Chuck Coutant and Bill Hayden; by Jim
Tarpinian and Richard Ward; by Ted Atkinson and Kent
Williams; and by Nancy Coutant and Jane Hayden,
respectively. The formation of the Renovation Committee was
the result of a number of renovation discussions that had
quietly occurred in the Planning and the Property and
Maintenance Commissions for several years. With only small
parcels of operating money available, the sanctuary
building built in 1950-51 was suffering from benign
neglect.
After Dr. Horne made a surprising decision to resign, the
sanctuary renovation program was temporarily put on hold
for several months during the search for an interim
minister and while the congregation, church office and the
Session were learning to adjust to the loss of Dr. Horne
and perform many of his duties.
First and foremost, Dr. Horne's 14 1/2 year tenure as
pastor is remembered as a stable period in which the church
grew modestly despite several cutbacks in the Department of
Energy-supported facilities in Oak Ridge and a small
decrease in the city's population.
Dr. Horne promoted active participation by all age groups,
especially the youth. Thanks to the young families who were
attracted to the church through his ministry, the average
age decreased. Youth participated at every worship service
during the children's sermon or as an acolyte; frequently,
one of the youth choirs also sang. He introduced the idea
of a youth elder serving on Session with full voting
rights. The Session also had equal representation of men
and women throughout the period. In fact, men and women of
all ages regularly served together not only as elders but
also as greeters, liturgists, fellowship hosts, commission
members, and ushers. The fellowship programs also expanded
modestly and thrived during his tenure.
Numerous members of the congregation remember Dr. Horne
most for the important help and support he rendered during
a personal or family crisis. Church member Charles
Washington was particularly grateful for Dr. Horne's
support when he was critically ill and received a heart
transplant.
Dr. Horne was very concerned about Christian education in
the reformed tradition. Thanks to the church's commitment
to Christian education and the hiring of able staff who
could work under the leadership of Dr. Horne, the program
was rebuilt again. The program continued to thrive even
after the charismatic Ms. Mykles moved away. He liked to
use the Confessional banners as a teaching tool. In fact,
his artistic wife, Marjorie, designed the Advent banner and
she constructed the Pentecost banner. Her line sketch of
the sanctuary was also used prominently during the
Bicentennial Mission and Building Fund campaign and was
featured on the cover of the monthly newsletter The
Banner.
Dr. Horne was also interested in applying modern management
and personnel techniques in the church environment. This
interest showed during several congregational goal-setting
exercises that he led. He encouraged computerization of the
business aspects of the church.
Dr. Horne was involved in community and Presbytery
activities. At various times he was an officer and member
of the Atomic City Kiwanis Club, Oak Ridge Ministerial
Association, the Oak Ridge CONTACT, Childbirth Education
Association, Community Services for Exceptional Citizens
and the ADFAC organizations. He also served in a number of
ways at the Presbytery level for both the Union Presbytery
and its successor, the Presbytery of East Tennessee; he
took Presbytery matters seriously. At the local Presbytery
level, for example, his vision of the future and his
practical ideas contributed to the smooth transition from
the Union Presbytery of the United Presbyterian Church to
the geographically redefined and theologically diverse
Presbytery of East Tennessee of the merged church. In
recent years, Dr. Horne has served as interim minister for
churches in Knoxville and Kentucky.

Popular Interim Ministers: John Stuhl and Louise
(Boo) Farrior
In January 1993, the Interim Pastoral Search Committee
consisting of Nancy Coutant, Doug Greenlee, Peggy Hilliard,
Shirley Knight, Herb Krause, Dick Rush, and Jim Tarpinian
recommended the hiring of the Reverend John Stuhl as our
part-time interim minister through June 1994.
 |
| The Rev. John Stuhl
and Rev. Louise Farrior |
The perceptive, colorful, witty, and energetic Mr.
Stuhl was well received by the congregation. His writing,
counseling, storytelling, and interpersonal skills as well
as his often entertaining and spiritually uplifting sermons
helped heal the congregation. Mr. Stuhl, who had previously
served as pastor of Covenant Presbyterian Church in
Knoxville, was available to the congregation while he was
completing the requirements for a Ph.D. degree in
psychology and counseling at the University of Tennessee in
Knoxville. In mid-January Mr. Stuhl began serving as the
church's interim pastor 30 hours a week, including the
moderation of Session. On the last Sunday before his
departure, he read a poem he wrote called "Wonderful" in
which he expressed his love for the congregation to whom he
was saying goodbye; the next Sunday, church member Steve
Krause, while playing the piano, sang a song that he
composed using words from Mr. Stuhl's original poem. Also,
on his last Sunday, a party was given for him and his
family (wife Sue and daughters Alison and Jessica). Mr.
Stuhl left in August 1994 for Indiana University in
Bloomington, where he completed his internship as part of
his requirements for a Ph.D. degree in counseling. In
August 1995 he earned his degree and began work as program
director for the Wellness Community in Knoxville, where he
counseled cancer patients. He later counseled patients in
private practice in Oak Ridge.
During Mr. Stuhl's ministry, the church renovation was
completed. After more than three years of planning meetings
involving the Planning and the Property and Maintenance
Commissions, the Renovation Committee's Steering Committee
and subcommittees, plus architects, contractors and
numerous congregational forums (starting in mid-1991), the
construction phase finally began at the end of October
1993. The construction phase was completed in mid-1994 and
the sanctuary was formally dedicated on September 18, 1994.
The work of these commissions in 1991 and the Renovation
Committee in 1992-1994 surpassed the congregational
renovation goals for 1988 through 1993.
The long-range plans of the church's founders and much more
was finally realized by the completion of this first major
sanctuary renovation since it was built in the early
1950's. As evidenced by the original sanctuary building
blueprints (found in the archives of the East Tennessee
Historical Society), the church's founders had intended a
brick facade and a more elegant kitchen; unfortunately,
they ran out of money.
The sanctuary now has an elegant brick exterior, new
energy-efficient windows, insulated roofing, rebuilt
entrance cubicles, sidewalks, and a new entrance to
Fellowship Hall. In the interior are a modern kitchen, new
flooring and carpeting in the sanctuary and Fellowship
Hall, pew cushions, spacious new rest rooms, an enlarged
narthex,
 |
Dick Lord oversaw
the sound
system upgrade, seen here
in December 2007
|
| Click photo to enlarge
it |
and an improved sound system (now operated by a
Sound Guild). These improvements, which far exceeded the
original plans, took the church into the 21st
century.
The excellent workmanship is the result of teamwork
involving the late Luther Agee, Cooper and Perry Architects
of Knoxville, our general contractor, Humphrey Engineering
and Construction Company of Maryville, their
subcontractors, and several of our own. The entire effort
was initiated by Dan Terpstra as chairperson of the
Property and Maintenance Commission.
The total renovation cost of about $407,000 exceeded the
original pre-construction estimate by $47,000 on a "cost
plus" contract primarily because of the high rainfall
during the construction period (about twice the average
rainfall) and a few additional renovation changes made
after the estimate to achieve increased functionality.
Existing pledges to the Bicentennial Mission and Building
Fund and a later add-on campaign cover about $350,000 of
the renovation cost.
Mr. Stuhl returned in September 1994 to participate in the
dedication of the renovated sanctuary with the new interim
minister Dr. Louise (Boo) Farrior. Boo agreed to serve our
church in her sixth interim position since she "retired"
from her position as associate pastor of the Preston Hollow
Presbyterian Church in Dallas, Texas. During her career,
she traveled to faraway places such as Alaska, Australia,
Israel, New Zealand, and Norway. The 78-year-old minister,
the second woman to be ordained as a Presbyterian minister
in the South (Presbyterian Church in the United States),
was hired by the Interim Pastor Committee for the period of
September 1994 through May 1995. She continued her work
through June 11, 1995, when it was announced that Session
had named her interim pastor emeritus. Boo is an elegant
woman who is remembered for her articulate, theologically
sound sermons. The congregation greatly appreciated her
wisdom, scholarship, charm, and style.

Bell Tower and Memorial Garden: The Dwyn Mounger
Years
In February 1995, at the annual congregational meeting, it
was announced that the Pastoral Search Committee headed by
Pat Clark and then Chuck Hadden wished to call a new
permanent pastor (other committee members were Celia
Barrett, Mike Bast, Jack Davidson, Ginny Dunlap, Mike
Hilliard, Gene Ice, and Beth White; when Barrett and White
left, Mary Mullins and Peggy Bertrand Terpstra took their
places).
The pastor selected was Dr. Dwyn Mounger, an erudite,
energetic and engaging personality with an impressive
knowledge of religious history.
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The Rev. Dwyn
Mounger
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it |
His preaching was considered well organized,
thorough, interesting, and varied; he told stories and gave
analogies. He wrote and acted out sermons in verse. He grew
up in Mississippi, the son of a Presbyterian minister who
was a leader in the Mississippi civil rights movement in
the 1960's. He was a world traveler; he led tours in
Scotland, England, Ireland, the Netherlands, Switzerland,
East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Egypt, Israel,
China, and France. He incorporated his experiences into his
theology. He is an excellent writer. He is author of the
words for Hymn # 239 in the new church hymnal and of a
sermon published in Harper & Row's collection of the
best sermons of 1989. He and his wife Kay, an elementary
school teacher, have a daughter Misty and son Mack. The
congregation voted to call Dr. Mounger on May 1,
1995.
Dr. Mounger has a B.A. degree in history and philosophy
from Bellhaven College, an M.S. degree in history from
Mississippi State University, B.D. and M.Div. degrees from
Princeton Theological Seminary, and a Ph.D. degree in
American religious history from Union Theological Seminary
in New York City. He was a professor of religion at Peace
College (a small women's liberal arts college in Raleigh,
North Carolina, affiliated with the Presbyterian Church)
for three years (filling a position previously held by Boo
Farrior -- the first of two times he followed her), an
organizing pastor for a small church, and a pastor for 17
years of three multi-staff churches ranging in size from
550 to 750 members.
For most of his ministry, he regularly led services of
worship in state prisons in Georgia, North Carolina, and
South Carolina. He continued this practice while at the Oak
Ridge church. He conducted services with the help of our
church parishioners at Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary
and Morgan County Prison. He opposed the death penalty and
expressed his opinion on this matter in church sermons and
newspaper articles.
He initiated exchange programs in which he preached at one
church while the pastor there preached at our church.
Members of our congregation attended late afternoon
services and ate dinner with members of the congregation of
Grace Lutheran and Spurgeon Chapel AME Zion churches at
both their churches and ours.
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The bell at the
manufacturer
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it |
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Belltower being
built, 1999
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The belltower as of
2011
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Under the leadership of Luther Agee, Fred Haywood,
Paul Rohwer, and Priscilla Campbell, a Grace Odyssey
campaign was held to raise funds to support renovation of
the Education Building and Activities Building and addition
of a memorial garden
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The Memorial
Garden
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it |
and columbarium. The money supplemented the funds
raised by the sale of the home and furnishings of Nancy
Betz after she died; Nancy had willed most of her assets to
the church. Dr. Mounger's persuasive abilities led to
additions of a bell tower and a sculpture in the memorial
garden. The bell tower was funded by Gerald Slaughter and
his family as a memorial to his late wife Doris. An
anonymous donation paid for the "Circle of Life" granite
disk sculpture done by a local artist.
As part of the renovation, bricks matching those on the
Sanctuary Building were added to the Education Building, a
covered walkway was installed connecting the Education
Building to the Sanctuary Building. The Education Building
was upgraded inside to bring it up to code so it could be
used as a day care center. It also has an improved nursery,
which is expected to help the church attract more young
families. In 2000 the church received an Environmental
Quality Award from the city of Oak Ridge for its new
look.
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Donna
Hoppestad
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it |
In 1998 Donna Hoppestad, a church member, was hired
as director of Christian Education. She played a major role
in preparing the renovated Education Building for church
school classes. A hard worker with charisma, she was
popular among the church's children, teens, and their
parents.
In 1998 the 210th General Assembly failed to keep August 6
as Hiroshima Day on the Presbyterian Planning Calendar.
Hiroshima Day is important to the Oak Ridge church because
it is the anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on
Hiroshima, Japan; Oak Ridge supplied the highly enriched
uranium used in that bomb in 1945. Working with the Social
Concerns Commission, Mr. Mounger persuaded the Presbytery
and later the General Assembly to approve an overture to
designate August 6 on the Presbyterian calendar as the "Day
of Prayer for Nuclear Peace." Nuclear Peace Day is now
observed by Presbyterian churches throughout the nation.
Since 1945 Oak Ridgers and Japanese have become friends.
Oak Ridge acquired a Friendship Bell from Japan and is the
sister city of Naka-Machi, Japan.
Our church also signed the "Call to Covenant Community."
This was an effort to bring peace to the discussion
concerning whether openly gay persons could be ordained as
ministers. The church set up committees to look into using
the Education Building for a day-care center or Headstart
program during the week and to make plans to renovate the
pipe organ.
In 1999 the Session approved several new policy
statements-"Policy for Use of Buildings and Facilities,"
"Personnel Policies Manual," and "Interment Policy for the
Memorial Garden."
In 2000 Dr. Mounger wrote a Bible study entitled "Glory
from the Unexpected" that was published in a new book
called Upper Room Disciplines. The Membership and
Human Resources Commission formed a Church Growth
Committee. The Environmental Stewardship Committee was
established as part of the Social Concerns Commission; the
committee played a role in the selection of
energy-efficient lights that were installed in Room 102 in
the Activities Building, where many church and community
meetings are held.
At a congregational meeting on March 4, 2001, Dr. Mounger
announced his resignation. By September 1, he had become an
interim pastor at a Presbyterian church in Statesboro,
Georgia.
From April 2001 through August 2002, the Reverend Graeme
Sieber served as interim pastor at our church. Mr. Sieber
received a B. A. degree
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Graeme
Sieber
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it |
from Maryville College in 1957, an M. Div. degree
from the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary in 1960, and an M.
S. degree in youth care administration from Nova
Southeastern University in 1997. He served for 23 years as
parish pastor for three churches in Pennsylvania. In 1983
he came home to East Tennessee and served as pastor to the
Graystone Presbyterian Church in Knoxville until 1989. From
1989 to 1997 he was executive director of the Bachman
Memorial Home , Inc. (child care agency), in Cleveland,
Tennessee. From 1998 to 2000 he was interim pastor at the
Farner Presbyterian Church in Farner, Tennessee. Mr. Sieber
had a calming and therapeutic effect on the church's
congregation, helping it to recover from the loss of Dr.
Mounger.

Our First Permanent Woman Pastor: The Kerra English
Years
By September 2002, the pastor nominating committee had a
candidate to recommend to the congregation. The candidate
was a young woman minister, who would not be available
until January 2003.
In the meantime, another young woman was hired as interim
minister for about three months. This woman had never been
in charge of a church
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| The Rev. Sharon
Carter |
before, so our church was quite willing to give her
useful experience. She was the Rev. Sharon Carter, a 2001
graduate of Louisville Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. A
native of Kingsport, Tennessee, who studied at East
Tennessee State University and the University of Tennessee,
she was ordained in December 2001. She came to our church
from Fountain City Presbyterian Church, where she served as
interim pastor. Notwithstanding her short tenure with us,
the Rev. Carter took firm control of administrative and
spiritual affairs. The church did not languish, but moved
firmly forward on her watch. She proved adept at handling
conflicts. Her three month stint was good experience for
her, and a good experience for the congregation.
 |
| The Rev. Kerra
Becker English |
On January 5, 2003, Kerra Noel Becker English was
installed as church pastor during the regular worship
service. The Rev. English grew up in Maryland and graduated
with a liberal arts degree from West Virginia University.
She earned her master of divinity degree from Union
Theological Seminary in Richmond, Virginia. While there she
served as an intern at a large suburban church in Beaumont,
Texas.
When she was 26 years old, she accepted her first call. She
was asked to serve as solo pastor for two yoked churches in
Altoona, Pennsylvania. Her task was to pull together two
small Presbyterian churches. She worked with two church
sessions, two congregations, and two vastly different
worldviews in an attempt to form one congregation. As it
turned out, the two congregations decided not to merge
until later.
“The experience forced her to develop a whole set of
skills that apply directly to our church’s goals,
particularly in church development,” said Jim
Campbell, chair of the church’s pastor nominating
committee. “She worked with the churches in Altoona
to establish congregational identity, develop a ministry
plan, renew outreach to the community, increase leadership
opportunities for the laity, and create spiritual energy.
She brings that training and experience to us
now.”
The Rev. English preached two sermons every Sunday in
Altoona as part of her efforts to bring vitality to the
worship experience. Two of her sermons appeared in the 2003
publication of the Abingdon Women’s Preaching
Journal. She has submitted four particular lectionary
sermons to “The Preaching Project” for research
into styles of worship leadership.
The Rev. English had planned to become a lawyer as she
completed her college studies. But while serving as a youth
delegate to the General Assembly (annual national gathering
of Presbyterian church delegates) in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, she was so overwhelmed by the work load that
she prayed to God several times and experienced what proved
to be a defining moment.
“As anyone who’s been to a General Assembly
meeting will tell you, it’s an overwhelming
experience, and in my own state of panic about all the
work, I retired to the ladies’ room to catch my
breath,” she said. “In that instant, I knew
that God was calling me to do something more than just
General Assembly, so I had the Jonah-like ‘Ministry
to Nineveh is not for me’ kind of talk with God,
threatened to leave the conference center on the next train
out, and had a very aggravated prayer to God, to say the
least. Much to my own surprise, God called me into the
ministry anyway.”
“Open communication and a leadership style that
invites prayerful discussion and debate are two of her
strengths,” Campbell said of the Rev. English.
“She leads by example.”
“Jesus promises us not only eternal life, but
abundant life,” the Rev. English said. “So I
want to really ‘live’ the life I’ve been
given, not just grind it away. I want to be a role model
for complete living that honors work and play, family and
solitude, community and individuality, prayer and study.
I’ve found that the more I stretch my spirit, the
more open I become to living God’s will for my
life.”
The Rev. English and her husband Chuck, originally a
science teacher at Oak Ridge High School and more recently
a science education consultant who co-owns a company, live
in Oak Ridge with their son Cade and daughter Ryleigh (born
in 2007 when Cade was eight years old). The couple’s
interests include ballroom dancing, reading, playing with
the family cat, enjoying dinner with friends, and
participating in conversations about the meaning of
life.
In 2003, her first year, the Rev. English conducted
memorial services for seven church members who had died.
They included Harry Carper, former choir director; Jack
Davidson, who found connections between science and
religion and gave amusing children’s sermons during
which he showed the kids different gadgets; Louise Fowler,
a well-liked Sunday school teacher who was very
knowledgeable about Biblical history and who helped sew
church banners; Ed Phares, a choir singer who helped build
the original organ; Beatrice Kitchens, Bill Gall, and Ruby
Gray, who was a co-leader of the Christian Education
Committee as a Session member. A nameplate was installed on
the Memorial Wall for Dr. Bob Crothers, pastor emeritus of
our church who came here from New York in the 1960s when
our church had a ministerial crisis and who died in March
2003.
According to Don Spong, the clerk of Session, “During
2003, Kerra has provided inspired leadership of our worship
services, delivered many excellent sermons, introduced new
concepts regarding church re-development, served as an
effective moderator of Session, and has rapidly gotten to
know the needs of our church.” In addition, the
church welcomed 17 new members.
The church family was very concerned about nine-year-old
Ben Terpstra, who was hospitalized in early 2003 in
Children’s Hospital in Knoxville for five weeks as he
struggled to survive Guillaume-Barre Disease that
mysteriously left him unable to walk and even breathe
without assistance. He had therapy for four weeks at
Patricia Neal Rehabilitation Center in Knoxville. After
returning home he was restricted to a wheelchair and walker
for more than six months. He recovered from significant
residual effects nearly a year later.
The clerk listed these highlights for 2003: (1) planning
the renovation of the 50-year-old pipe organ and hiring Dan
Vaughan of Vaughan Keyboard Service, Inc., recommended by
new members Jim and Meg Tonne, who knew of his work in the
church they attended in Texas;
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Barbara
Parker
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Meg
Tonne
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(2) continuing the successful parish nurse program started
by Jim Wessel, with Meg Tonne, a registered nurse,
replacing our church’s first parish nurse, Barbara
Parker, who moved to Nashville with her husband, a Baptist
minister; (3) providing space in the Education building for
the Anderson County Head Start daycare program for young
children and offering the program a $300 reduction in rent
for our facilities; and (4) correcting a Sanctuary building
settlement problem to stave off possible structural defects
and cracking.
Jim Tonne took over the church website from Grimes
Slaughter. Jim made a number of changes to the website,
including technical upgrades and the addition of more
photos, news about the church that appeared in the local
newspaper, and blogs by church members on mission
trips.
For 2004 Session set three ministry objectives and the
committees set related mission objectives: (1) to show
God’s love; (2) to strengthen our connection with God
and each other, and (3) to inspire the next generation of
believers through worship and education.
The organ was renovated and rebuilt in 2004, and Dan
Vaughan, the renovator, and Jim Allen, our organist,
performed an organ recital in January 2005.
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Organ prior to
renovation
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After
renovation
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The Organ Dedication Concert attracted many people
from the community as well as our own church members.
The Christian Education committee started a Friday Lunch
Program for teenagers from Oak Ridge High School, many of
whom were not members of our church. This ongoing service
was considered a worthwhile outreach activity.
The Jack Davidson Memorial Lecture Series was launched
under the leadership of Richard Ward in 2004. Douglas
Ottati was the first speaker in the series in April. He was
the mentor of Pastor Kerra at Union Theological Seminary in
Richmond and delivered the sermon at her installation in
January 2003.
Pastor Kerra attended a seminar in June on
“Shepherding the Spiritual Lives of
Congregations” and proposed revisions to the
Session’s Operating Policies that were adopted by the
Session. All commissions became committees. The Planning
Commission was eliminated and a Pastor Support Committee
was added. The program committees are Worship, Christian
Education, Congregational Care and Outreach, Social
Concerns, and Christian Stewardship. The administrative
committees are Finance and Property and Maintenance. The
specialized committees are Personnel, Pastor Support, and
Nominating. A Planning Committee was added later after a
vision plan was developed.
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| Wednesday night
suppers |
| Click photo to enlarge |
In 2004 Susan Sharp and Sue Byrne started a series of
Wednesday night dinners for seven weeks in the fall and
seven weeks in the spring. The purpose of the dinners was
to “try to provide an organizational structure
through which members of the congregation care for each
other,” Sharp wrote.
Fundraising activities in early 2005, including an auction,
a Hal Hopson Hymn Festival led by Arlene Crawford, and a
talent show featuring our church’s talented singers
and comedians, were held under the leadership of Sue Byrne
to help send 19 church ambassadors in March to Belize, a
country in Central America. Our members, led by Sue Byrne,
Dan Terpstra, Tim Myrick, Doug Allen, and Dale Hadden,
helped build a community laundry facility that the
government of Armenia was supposed to finish and supply
with clean water. The goal was to ensure that the Mayan and
Guatemalan women in Armenia will no longer have to walk two
miles to the river to wash their families’ clothes.
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| The path to
Belize |
| Click graphic to
enlarge |
Some members painted the interior of a daycare
center, while others provided medicines and health
education to people in need.
“Those of us who didn’t make the trip followed
along on the blog, sent letters of encouragement, and
contributed money to projects completed and projects only
beginning in our relationship with the people of
Armenia,” wrote Pastor Kerra in her 2005 annual
report. “We responded to hurricanes and earthquakes
with our prayers and contributions, and we sent another
group of workers to Mississippi to muck out houses and put
on roofs in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina.”
In April 2005 Dr. Holmes Rolston III, University
Distinguished Professor of philosophy at Colorado State
University and winner of the prestigious 2003 Templeton
Prize for Progress toward Research or Discoveries about
Spiritual Realities, became the church’s second
Jackson B. Davidson Memorial Lecturer on Science and
Religion. Dr. Rolston is the author of six books and has
degrees from Davidson College, the University of
Pittsburgh, and the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. He
uses the Darwinian model to define the main thematic
concepts in his philosophy and in the general trend of his
thinking.
In 2005 the Terpstra family – Dan, Peggy, and their
son Ben – went to the Mexican border to learn about
the struggles of Mexican immigrants who come to America to
work and send money home to their families who cannot sell
the corn and beans they raise for less than the comparable
vegetables exported there from America. Ben gave up
watching television so he could go on this trip after
hearing an inspiring talk in Maryville by Presbyterian
Church U.S.A. General Assembly Moderator Rick
Ufford-Chase.
In 2006, 12-year-old Ben Terpstra found out he could walk
in the hot desert like Mexican immigrants when he joined
Rick Ufford-Chase on a trip with Borderlinks, a
Presbyterian ministry to immigrants on the U.S.-Mexican
border. Borderlinks is concerned that some immigrants die
in the desert from exposure, disease, and lack of food and
water.
Claire Harris was elected to represent the Presbytery of
East Tennessee as a Youth Advisory Delegate to the 2006
General Assembly. Session also supported Claire’s
mission trip to Guatemala. Graduating seniors joined
Presbyterian campus ministry programs at the colleges they
attended.
Six members of the congregation, including Donna Hoppestad,
director of Christian Education, attended “The Church
in the 21st Century” conference in Las Vegas. Donna
and Janet Swift later talked to a Sunday school class on
church growth. Also that year, Donna completed her
Certification on Youth Ministry from Columbia
Seminary.
Walt and Kate Porter and Jim and Helen Wessel led a refugee
project in which church members welcomed and supported the
Iskandarov family whose ancestors lived in Turkey. The
family had been living in Georgia, a country that was
formed after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in
1991.
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The
defibrillator
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Thanks to an anonynous donation, an Automated External
Defibrillator was purchased and placed in the Sanctuary in
case a church member suffers a serious heart problem during
the worship service. Parish nurse Meg Tonne later
instructed ushers in how to use the device.
Pastor Kerra agreed to assist the Pastor Nominating
Committee at First Presbyterian Church of Knoxville, to
serve on the President’s Advisory Council of
Union-Presbyterian School of Christian Education, and
contribute to the Reforming Ministry Project of the
Presbyterian Church (USA). She spoke at her home
church’s 150th anniversary in November 2006, as the
only member of that congregation to have ever been ordained
as a minister.
In January, the church began a year filled with
interesting, diverse musical events. Susan Sharp and
Richard Ward led a peaceful Taizé service in which
Becky Ball, Chuck Hadden, Diane Krause, Shirley Moore, and
Peggy Terpstra provided the music while Bob Dunlap and Herb
Krause served as readers.
During a worship service in March, the adult Chancel Choir,
assisted by outside singers and accompanied by a brass
ensemble, presented John Rutter’s “Te
Deum.” In May the youth and adult choirs presented
excerpts for the “Gospel Mass.” Arlene Crawford
conducted both musical presentations.
In April 2006 the Reverend Dr. Antje Jackelén
presented the third Jackson B. Davidson Memorial Lecture on
Science and Religion. Dr. Jackelén was associate
professor of systematic theology and religion and science
at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago and director
of the Zygon Center for Religion and Science in Chicago.
Her title was “Cognitive Sciences Considered: Going
Beyond the Popular Debates of Religion and
Science.”
“Will We Love as Jesus Did?” was the theme of
an evening alternative worship service held in the
Sanctuary in May. Pastor Kerra gave a sermon on the topic
and Knoxville area jazz-gospel-blues musician Wendell
Werner and a one-time choir that included our own adult
choir members performed lively, inspirational music that
addressed the theme.
In June Arlene and Oakley Crawford once again led another
group of our musical church members to the Montreat Worship
and Music Conference in North Carolina.
In another major event arranged by Dan Terpstra and
coordinated by Herb Krause, our church hosted 12 talented
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Congo choir
logo
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enlarge |
singers and drummers of the Presbyterian Choir of
the Congo in August. Extensive publicity helped fill the
Sanctuary for this extraordinary concert co-sponsored by
the Peacemaking Committee of the Presbytery of East
Tennessee. WBIR-TV in Knoxville covered the concert and
presented some of the music and an interview with a vocal
singer shown on both the 11 o’clock nightly and early
morning news. As a result of the concert, $5000 was raised
to benefit education in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo.
In June 2007 Chuck and Kerra English welcomed the arrival
of their second child, Ryleigh. Cade, then 8, was pleased
to have a sister. The church members supported the English
family by providing a baby shower, presents, and care of
Cade so the parents could attend childbirth classes and
infant CPR.
In the spring a major transition occurred in the church
office. Pastor Kerra wrote the following in her annual
report on 2007: “Janet Livingston announced her
retirement as office assistant after 12 years. After
celebrating the milestone of 15 years as the familiar face
and voice of First Presbyterian Church, office manager
Vicki Seaton Murrah left her position for full-time real
estate work. Donna Hoppestad resigned her position as
director of Christian education and is now working in
publicity for the Presbytery of East Tennessee. And Michael
Jackson left his job as custodian for personal
reasons—to move back to Ohio.”
New member Sue Skytta volunteered to take over the office
work and keep the information flowing, and Denise Parker
produced the bulletins for each Sunday worship service. The
Personnel Committee devoted many hours to the transition,
which resulted in the hiring in the fall of Mike Skytta as
custodian and Elizabeth Bentley as office manager and
administrative assistant.
A new Planning Committee was formed to guide Session in
formulating a vision for the mission of the church. This
task required meetings of the parish groups to determine
the needs of the congregation and their vision for the
church.
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Daniel
Tipton
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| Click photo to enlarge |
As a result of the parish group recommendations and
comments, a Banner service was held on Reformation Sunday
for the first time in several years; Daniel Tipton was
hired in 2008 as a youth director for middle school and
senior high students for 25 hours a week; elders were
trained to serve communion to the homebound on communion
Sundays; a second trip to Belize was planned for spring
break in 2008; 2008 was declared a “Year of
Prayer” for our church; the “volunteer
fair” concept was developed to encourage members of
the congregation to volunteer and join committees and
worship services, such as ushering and operating the sound
system; support and concerns were expressed on the music
program; and greater “connectedness” between
church members and the parish nurse, parish elders, and the
pastor were desired.
For three years members of a heating, ventilation, and air
conditioning (HVAC) committee and Session held heated
discussions on whether to replace the old air-to-air heat
pump with a more efficient air-to-air heat pump or a
geothermal (ground source) heat pump complete with
underground wells. While some members liked the idea of our
church being the first in Oak Ridge to have a geothermal
system, others strongly opposed the idea, saying that a
geothermal system would not be cost effective for a church
with limited income. Session finally decided that, because
of the large difference in cost, a 21st-century air-to-air
heat pump should be purchased and installed. Dan Terpstra
and Tim Myrick were asked to find the most cost-effective
HVAC system. Session approved their recommendation of a
high-efficiency innovative heat pump system to provide heat
on cold days and air conditioning on hot days. Three
companies submitted bids for the work. John H. Coleman
Company, LLC ($233,000) and Lewis Electric ($23,325) were
selected as the HVAC and electric contractors. An
additional $4500 was spent on reconstruction of walls, air
duct shrouds, and restroom ceilings in the Activities
Building. Total cost: $260,825.
The efficient system was installed in the fall. On very
cold days, natural gas rather than more expensive
electrical resistance heating provides additional heat.
Utility bills are lower as a result of the new system,
which was purchased using a state loan that the
congregation is paying back over a period of seven to 10
years.
In 2007 Arlene Crawford, music director, conducted the
Chancel Choir’s 16 members plus 12 singers from the
Oak Ridge Chorus, accompanied by five church members and
additional instrumentalists, in a Christmas Concert on
December 16. The concert featured the Magnificat by John
Ferguson and Gloria by John Rutter interspersed with
readings by Pastor Kerra.
The Jackson B. Davidson Memorial Lecturer in 2007 was Cathy
Grossman, the religion reporter for USA Today. She talked
about her experiences and impressions covering talks and
discussions on science and religion at Cambridge
University. The speakers included Templeton Prize winners
and atheists like Richard Dawkins. Cathy, a sister of one
of Richard Ward’s colleagues at work, gave a talk
that was very understandable and appealing to the
audience.
Five members died and nine new members were received in
2007.
In 2008 three members died and eight new members were
received.
More and more members were receiving church news by
electronic mail and sending e-mail to Kerra and Session
members. Larry Shappert decreased the office workload by
using Microsoft Excel spreadsheets to schedule sound system
controllers, ushers, and Finance Committee counters of
money received at weekly offerings.
In 2008 Pastor Kerra spent considerable time praying for
the church and each of its members. She sent pastoral notes
to each family and each parish elder, conveying her
gratitude for the ways each person has contributed to the
work of the church. She spent more time communicating with
potential new members, visiting homebound members, training
elders for the “extended home communion”
program for homebound members, teaching confirmation class,
and attending other Sunday school classes and fellowship
dinners. She also hosted a dessert party at her home for
her friend Dr. George Fisher, Professor Emeritus at Johns
Hopkins University and Baltimore’s Ecumenical
Institute of Theology, a personal friend, and Jackson
Davidson Memorial Lecturer on Science and Religion for
2008, who talked about religion and ecology; co-hosted a
“beer dinner” sold at an auction to support the
Belize mission; hosted “Parents’ Night
Out” for the church’s families with young
children; and hosted a concert featuring youth musicians
from the church.
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The community
garden
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| Click photo to enlarge |
Also in 2008 the idea to establish a community
garden on the church grounds was proposed and accepted at a
Session meeting in June. In the same month Judy Greeson,
clerk of Session, served as commissioner to the 218th
General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, held in San
Jose, California. And also in June, Sydney Murray III, the
manager of the Sound Guild, and Tiffany Milam were married
in our church.
In March 2008, $10,000 was raised for another mission trip
to Belize through a rummage sale, a talent show, silent
auction, afternoon tea, culinary herb sale, Belizean
Bar-B-Cue, and other Wednesday night dinners, all under the
leadership of Sue Skytta. A team of 30 members of the Oak
Ridge and Farragut Presbyterian churches flew to Belize to
complete the laundry project begun in 2005. When the well
went dry, the government promised to deliver water from the
river by truck to the laundry facility if water storage is
provided. Our church raised funds to purchase four
1200-gallon polyethylene tanks, cement, PVC pipes, and
other plumbing parts to provide water to the laundry
facility, a nearby community center, and the villagers. The
tanks collect rainwater during the wet season and store
water trucked in from the river during the dry season. A
construction crew from the two churches, under the
supervision of Jaguar Creek Ministries, laid down the
concrete pad, installed the tanks on the pad, and did the
plumbing work. As a result, the villagers no longer must
make the long walk to and from the river. During the
mission trip, the adults installed doors, windows, plumbing
and electrical wiring in the community center, and the
teens from our church helped Belizean teens paint an
elementary school classroom and make repairs to an
orphanage.
Chuck and Dale Hadden, Tim Myrick, Dan Terpstra, and other
members of the Oak Ridge and Farragut team received
training in 2007 from the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Clean Water U in Mississippi on how to install Living
Waters for the World (LWW) water-treatment systems based
partly on church member Doug Allen’s original design.
This relatively inexpensive technology could be used to
transform contaminated water into clean drinking water at
central gathering sites such as the laundry facility in
Armenia and several schools sponsored by Worldwide
Christian Schools.
Tim Myrick raised money from the Oak Ridge and Clinton
Rotary clubs to help Aid to Distressed Families of
Appalachian Counties (ADFAC, which is headquartered at our
church) qualify for a $50,000 federal grant to purchase LWW
water-treatment systems for houses in Eagan, Tennessee, as
part of the Buffalo Creek Water Project. These families had
to buy bottled water to avoid drinking, cooking, and
bathing with their contaminated “yellow” well
water as a result of acid mine drainage from coal strip
mining and mountain-top removal to access additional coal.
Tim also received support from our church for his mission
to bring clean water to our neighbors in the Appalachian
mountains of Tennessee as part of ADFAC’s efforts to
repair and retrofit houses of people who unfortunately
cannot afford to improve their own homes. In November 2008,
Wil Howie, director of the Living Waters of the World
project, was a guest minister at our church and presented a
Social Concerns Seminar on LWW projects.
Inspired by the Appalachian and Belizean clean-water
missions of our church members, Session approved this new
vision statement for the church at a retreat in January
2009: “God’s spirit, given by Christ, flows
through us as living water to wash, heal, and satisfy. As a
congregation we become a fountain, sharing this living
water with others.”
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| Arlene's Going-away
Cake |
| Click photo to enlarge |
On January 18, 2009, Music Director Arlene Crawford
conducted a concert of choir members and guest singers in
performing John Rutter’s “Magnificat” and
Gabriel Faure’s “Requiem.” The choir was
accompanied by a small orchestra with her daughter,
professional violinist Susan Crawford, as the
concertmaster. On August 30, a Celebration of Music and a
special Sunday evening dinner (planned by Susan Sharp and
Peggy Terpstra) were presented in honor of Arlene
Crawford’s 31 years of service as director of music
upon her retirement.
In 2010 Mike Skytta left his position as custodian, and the
church hired a team of workers from Emory Valley Center
(which supports and trains people with developmental
disabilities) to keep the church clean and perform other
custodial tasks.
In September Anna Thomas joined the church staff as the new
director of music.
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Anna Thomas,
Director of Music |
| Click photo to enlarge<
/font> |
A new youth choir was established, and Anna
arranged for the choir to sing on Sunday afternoon to the
accompaniment of Wendel Werner, a noted jazz pianist and
composer from Knoxville.
Pastor Kerra gave sermons on “Great Themes of the
Reformation.” On Sunday, March 22, the speaker for
the annual Jackson B. Davidson Memorial Lecture was Loren
Haarsma, assistant professor of physics at Calvin College
in Michigan, whose topic was “Darwin and Calvin:
God’s Providence and Human Origins in Light of
Evolution.” On Sunday, November 1, a message about
stewardship was delivered by Frances Cone Caldwell,
director of development and stewardship for the Episcopal
Diocese of Virginia. The church celebrated the decision by
Youth Director Daniel Tipton to enter seminary in
preparation to become a Presbyterian minister.
Our church was proud to have two Young Adult Volunteers
selected by the national church—Sarah Terpstra and
Bonnie Browne. Sarah served in Peru and Bonnie worked at
the Epiphany House at Second Presbyterian Church in
Nashville, Tennessee.
In February 2010 our church hosted a Presbytery of East
Tennessee meeting. Church members cleaned the church
beforehand and welcomed delegates from all over the
presbytery.
On February 28, the church hosted a benefit concert led by
Wendel Werner for Hand Up for Women.
At a March retreat in 2010 the Session agreed to expand the
church’s mission activities, revitalize youth and
children’s ministries to attract more families, and
strengthen and deepen our church ties.
On April 25 Robert Bast, brother of member Mike Bast,
delivered the annual Jackson B. Davidson Memorial Lecture
on Science and Religion. Dr. Bast, associate professor of
history at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, spoke
on “Printing, Propaganda, and the Protestant
Reformation.”
The community garden continued to be a success, the
fpcor.org website continued to be a good resource for
members of the church and community, and the church
continued to support Living Waters for the World
clean-water projects in Appalachia and Belize. Tim Myrick
was elected moderator of the Synod-level committee that
oversees our Synod of Living Waters’ Living Waters
for the World program. Planning began for a trip to Belize
in March 2011.
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Hannah
Norris
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| Click photo to enlarge |
Hannah Norris was hired as director of youth and
children’s ministries in 2010. Daniel Tipton, former
youth director, entered Louisville Seminary in
August.
In 2010 five members were transferred to other churches,
three new members were received, two were removed from the
active role, one child was baptized and three marriages
were performed by Pastor Kerra, and seven members
(including former organist and pianist Peggy Carper)
died.
At the November Session meeting, Pastor Kerra English
requested that the pastoral relationship between her and
our church be dissolved according to a provision in the
Book of Order. She asked to continue her work as pastor
through January 31, 2011, and the Session and congregation
approved her request. On January 29, 2011, the congregation
held a party to “celebrate her love, service, and
commitment to our church, our respect for her waiting for a
new calling, and our wish that she find peace and happiness
as a result of her decision.”
In March 2011 a group from the congregation spent a week in
Belize on a mission trip. They learned that the laundry
facility they had built a few years earlier was occupied by
a member of the Peace Corps and that the laundry tubs had
been moved to a nearby creek for use in washing clothes. A
significant achievement on this trip was the installation
by church members of a Living Waters for the World water
treatment system, of the size church members led by Tim
Myrick installed on single homes in Appalachia, for the
Octavia Waight Centre, a nursing home in San Ignacio in
western Belize. Some $800 donated by a Rotary club in
Pennsylvania paid for the system, which enabled the nursing
home with 35 residents to save money because the managers
no longer had to buy bottled water for drinking and
cooking. They received treated river water from the
municipal water system but the water chlorination levels
were often too high or too low and the water sometimes was
brown and tasted bad as a result of heavy rains. So a
decision was made to use bottled water until the LWW system
was installed. Now the residents have clean, inexpensive
water free of microbes, thanks to the work led by Dan
Terpstra and Chuck and Dale Hadden.

Interim Pastor Craig Hendrix
After two months of pulpit supply ministers, Session hired,
with the approval of the congregation, an interim pastor
named Craig Hendrix. He started his new position at the
church on April 1, 2011.
The Rev. Hendrix is a specialist in interim ministry with a
business background. A native of Oak Ridge, he served as
interim pastor at Bethel Presbyterian Church in Kingston
for 16 months in 2010 and 2011. Previously he served in the
same role at Powell Presbyterian Church.
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| The Rev. Craig
Hendrix |
Earlier in his career, he served churches fulltime
in Virginia and Michigan. The Rev. Hendrix holds a master
of divinity degree from Princeton Theological Seminary and
a B.A. degree from the University of Maryland. He has
completed course work for a doctorate in human and
organizational development from George Washington
University and is working on his dissertation. He has
considerable experience working as an executive in
corporations such as Upjohn, W. K. Kellogg Foundation,
Eaton, Brunswick, and Bush Brothers (the company
headquartered in Knoxville that is best known nationally
for its canned baked beans). He also partnered in and owned
his own businesses.
The Rev. Hendrix is an avid artist, musician, golfer, and
fly fisherman. He is married to Dana Hendrix, office
manager for the Presbytery of East Tennessee, and they have
three children – Cullen, Jason, and Genevieve.
Today, the church has about 250 members and is maintaining
a good size in a city with a stable population of around
30,000. A large core of the congregation is extremely
active, contributing to the life of the church and to the
service of the community and the world.

Carolyn Krause and Herb Krause, authors of this history of
First Presbyterian Church of Oak Ridge, gratefully
acknowledge the assistance of Dr. David L. Horne, the late
Dr. Robert Crothers, the late Harry Carper and Peggy
Carper, Pat Clark, the late Bob Lafferty, the late Ed
Phares, the late Ethel Wood, and Mary Kerr Pigeon (who
prepared the original history for publication and made an
electronic copy for later use). For the 50-year history, we
acknowledge the leadership of Anna George Dobbins (who
helped obtain information and photographs and who reviewed
the manuscript) and the review comments of the late Doug
MacNary, the late Jack Davidson, Mary Ann Davidson, Wayne
Clark, the late John Reeve and Ruth Reeve, Grimes
Slaughter, and others. Jim Tonne added the graphics.
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