Our roots run deep and strong at Trinity
United Methodist
Church. Trinity church was planted through the ministry of William “Billy”
Cravens, an enthusiastic Methodist Lay Preacher. Billy was a stonemason
by trade who came to Lexington in
1793 from Rockingham to rebuild the burned Liberty
Hall Academy on Mulberry Hill.
Billy organized our first class meeting by 1794 at the home of his
friend, John Burgess. The society, which was formed from that early
beginning, bought a piece of land on what is now Randolph Street and
built a small frame church for worship. This soon proved inadequate,
and it was replaced by a brick structure on the same site.
Local preachers and strong laymen
continued the work until the formation of the Lexington Circuit in
1832. In 1847, a division occurred over whether to belong to the
Baltimore or Virginia Conference, and a large part of the congregation
moved to a location on Jefferson Street. The remaining members met in
the Rockbridge County Court House for seven years. This separation
eventually paved the way for greater unity. By 1854, the church on
Jefferson Street had become a station with preachers supplied from the
Baltimore Conference, while the other group continued as part of a
circuit supplied from the Virginia Conference. The two groups were
reunited in 1864 to form a congregation of about 100 members, and they
worshipped in the Jefferson Street church.
The present location on Main Street was
acquired in 1889. The cornerstone of the first church on this site was
laid in 1890. On October 8, 1894, the church (costing $16,000) was
dedicated by Bishop W. W. Duncan. The Reverend Forest J. Prettyman was
the pastor at the time, and the congregation numbered about 300.
The growth of the congregation and the
attendance of Virginia Military Institute cadets and Washington and Lee University students made a
larger building imperative after only 35 years. Accordingly, the
present structure (costing approximately $120,000) was built during the
pastorate of the Reverend T. M. Swann in 1926. The debt on this
building proved a grievous burden during the depression years, but it
was finally liquidated during the pastorate of Dr. Benjamin T. Candler.
The church was dedicated by Bishop W. W. Peele on March 23, 1947. The
sanctuary was renovated for that occasion. A new organ, replacing the
one moved from the earlier building, was installed in 1949. Extensive
remodeling of the education facilities was undertaken in 1957.
Today, we are known as United
Methodists, a union in 1970 of The Methodist Church and The Evangelical
United Brethren Church.