*This date in 1838 celebrates the founding of the Bethel Church. Originally Bethel Baptist Institutional Church, it was founded in Jacksonville, Florida, and is the city's oldest Baptist congregation.
Established under co-pastors James McDonald and Ryan Frier, it had only six charter members, four whites and two Blacks; the latter were held as slaves by white members. Membership quickly grew, with most early congregants being enslaved Blacks who received day passes from their masters to attend services. The first meetings were held at "Mother Sam's," a local plantation. 1840, a dedicated meeting house was erected on Duval and Newnan streets.
This, the first church building in Jacksonville, was sold to Presbyterians in 1844. In 1861, the congregation built a permanent church structure in the west LaVilla neighborhood at Church and Julia streets. Bethel Baptist was interracial until after the American Civil War and Emancipation. Whites decided to segregate the congregation by race. At this time, members were already facing a split over which pastor to follow, and white congregants tried to force the Blacks, now freedmen, out of the church. They took their case to court, but the court ruled in favor of the freedmen, who were the majority of the congregation, and ruled that they were the rightful owners of the Bethel Baptist name and property.
In this period across the South, many Black Baptists withdrew from white-dominated churches to set up their outside white control. They soon also established a regional association and eventually a national organization. As a result, the whites formed Tabernacle Baptist Church, which they eventually renamed First Baptist Church. It is now one of the largest churches in the United States. Tabernacle Baptist purchased the Church Street property from Bethel Baptist Church, as was required by the court. In 1868, Bethel Baptist relocated to a large new Union and Pine Streets building.
In 1895, they replaced this structure with a large brick building. This burned in the Great Fire of 1901, which destroyed much of downtown Jacksonville. In 1904, architect M. H. Hubbard built the current edifice in Utica, New York. The 1904 building combined elements of Greek Revival and Romanesque Revival architecture. This building, located at 1058 North Hogan Street, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. Bethel Baptist continued to grow through this time, but political infighting led to parts of the congregation splintering off. By 1890, there were 1200 members, and the church received over $3000 in pledges yearly.
In 1894, it was recognized as an Institutional Church by the state of Florida, authorizing it to undertake social and educational work. Its main historian was Camilla Perkins Thompson. In 1988, the late 20th-century congregation opened a new, larger church complex next to the 1904 church. The three-story addition serves as an educational and administrative building. The campus was further expanded with a $7.5 million building that contains a new sanctuary, conference center, space for youth and other support groups, and bookstore. In 2006, the church's average attendance was 12,000 people. The attendance is 12,000 members. The senior pastor is Bishop Rudolph W. McKissick, Jr.