Historical Markers of Texas logo

Historical Markers of Texas

Back to Tom Green County

First United Methodist Church of San Angelo

San Angelo, Tom Green County

Marker Text

A product of 1870s religious zeal on this Indian-menaced frontier. After flood destroyed area's early community of Ben Ficklin (5 mi. S), closing its Sunday school, this church was organized and chartered by the West Texas Methodist Conference in November of 1882. On this site was erected a forty by sixty-foot frame building with a cupola-- said to be the first Protestant church house between Mason and El Paso. The founding pastor was the rugged frontiersman, Parson Andrew Jackson Potter (1830-1895), succeeded in 1886 by the dynamic Rev. Arthur E. Rector (1855-1955). Rapid growth soon necessitated a twenty-foot addition for nursery and choir loft. The building became a community center for various social and religious occasions. Miss Mary West (later Mrs. J. B. Taylor) organized the first choir. Other leading musicians: Miss Amie Cornick, J. R. Sanders, Mrs. L. B. Horton, Mrs. F. O. Perry, and Mrs. Mary Deal Metz. The frame church was replaced in 1904 by a large masonry building in the square "Akron" style then in vogue. The present Gothic edifice was completed in 1950. Four-story educational building was added, 1962. This church has excelled in education, sacred music, and missionary activities over the years. (1972)

Marker Details

Address 37 E. Beauregard
Location Description 37 E. Beauregard, San Angelo
Marker # 1895
Dedicated 1972
Size, Type 27" x 42"
Code churches; Methodist (Methodist Episcopal and United Methodist) denomination
Latitude, Longitude 31.462265, -100.435347

Map