Tag Archives: Churches of Bulloch County GA

Mt. Pisgah Primitive Baptist Church, Bulloch County

Exterior view of a white wooden building with a metal roof, featuring steps and a porch, surrounded by grass and trees.

Also known as Fish Trap Primitive Baptist, Mt. Pisgah Primitive Baptist Church is a Freedmen’s congregation established by Elder Aaron Munlin in 1883. It’s one of the oldest Black congregations in Bulloch County. Elder Munlin was born into slavery in South Carolina in 1843 and was sold to an enslaver in Bulloch County in 1856. After the Civil War, he helped establish other congregations of Black Primtive Baptists in Bulloch County, including Banks Creek and Bethel.

According to Alvin D. Jackson of the Willow Hill Heritage and Renaissance Center: “Mt. Pisgah Primitive Baptist Church is located in Bulloch County, Georgia. It was organized on November 21, 1883. There were only 5 people present at the time of the organization. Brother Howard and Sister Martha Kirkland, Brother Cain Parrish, Elder Aaron Munlin and a white Brother, Elder J. L. Smith, who acted as clerk during the organizational. These few met on Thursday, before the 4th Sunday in November and constituted the church (Mt. Pisgah). The door of the church was open to accept members. On came – Brother Andy Donaldson. They chose Elder Aaron Munlin to be their pastor. These few began doing work for the master in their own way and God blessed them.”


Elder Aaron Munlin served as pastor 18 years. He was a great man, sold as a slave, the founder of Sister, Bank Creek Primitive Baptist Church and Moderator of the Mt. Pleasant Association. He departed from this life April 11, 1911. The 2nd pastor was Elder Washington Hodges. He served 20 years. The 3rd pastor was Elder Hershel Smith who served 12 years.”

New Bethlehem Missionary Baptist Church, Register

Front view of a white church building with a peaked roof and decorative stained glass windows.

Nevils Creek Old Line Primitive Baptist Church, Bulloch County

Exterior view of Nevils Creek Old Line Primitive Baptist Church with a sign stating its establishment in 1790, surrounded by trees.

Nevils Creek is the oldest church in Bulloch County and one of the oldest Primitive Baptist churches in Georgia. It was constituted in 1790.

A weathered gravestone marked 'John Neville, 2 S.C. Regt., Rev. War' stands on a grassy area, with a small American flag placed beside it.

A single headstone is located beside the church, the final resting place of John Neville (1744-1804), who served in the 2nd South Carolina Regiment during the Revolutionary War. He may have been the founder of the congregation.

Back view of a white church building with two sets of stairs leading to doors, surrounded by autumn trees and an open grassy area.

Union United Methodist Church, 1884, Bulloch County

Historic white wooden building with a sloped roof, surrounded by trees and grass.

In 1790, a Methodist society that became Union church was organized in the home of Joshua Hodges, Sr. Hodges was a Revolutionary War veteran who had recently moved his family, including four sons, to the area. Members of the Methodist society set aside a tract of land west of the Hodges house, known on early land records as “Meeting House Reserve” and a log meeting house was constructed by 1792. The trustees were Joshua Hodges, Sr., Joseph Jackson, Jarvis Jackson, Catherine Hodges, Griffin Mizell, and Samuel Williams.

Interior view of a small sanctuary, with a green pulpit and circular altar.

In 1834, the second church was built to replace the log structure. It was built of planks and sat on log pillars. It was replaced by the present structure in 1884, incorporating materials from its predecessor in the altar rails and some of the pews. The altar rail was crafted by Robert W. Stringer.

Wooden church pews in a sunlit room, with light streaming through the windows.

McLeod Covenant Baptist Church, Emanuel County

This small congregation was founded in 1898. The quaint little church stands on the curve of a winding dirt road, just off Highway 57.

Red Hill Primtive Baptist Church, Bulloch County

Red Hill Primitive Baptist Church, surrounded by trees, featuring a sloped roof, front steps, and black window shutters. Sunlight filters through the leaves, creating a serene atmosphere.

This congregation dates to 1902. It is located in southeastern Bulloch County.

New Hope United Methodist Church, 1907, Bulloch County

A white church with a tall steeple and a black roof, surrounded by trees and a clear blue sky.

The congregation of New Hope Methodist was organized in 1804. It’s one of the most beautiful churches in Bulloch County. A historical marker placed by the South Georgia Conference of the United Methodist Church in 1998 reads: Organized from Union by Rev. Lewis Mayers, New Hope was Bulloch’s second Methodist Church. 1804 trustees were David Kennedy, Josiah Everette, Jarvis Jackson, Burrell Whittington and William M. Kennedy: other leaders were Joseph Hodges, Eli Kennedy and Lydia Anciaux. Burke and Ohoopee Circuit records, oldest in South Georgia, were kept by these leaders. In 1806 William McGee Kennedy entered the itineracy; later William McCall Kennedy, F.M. Kennedy and H.A. Hodges. Leadership at home and in the connectional church distinguishes New Hope, preparing for her third century.

Pleasant Hill Methodist Church, 1879, Bulloch County

Front view of a white church building with two doors, surrounded by pine trees and a sandy area.

This congregation dates to 1879. The church was built at a time when many congregations segregated the sexes through architecture. Men entered through one door and women through another.

Pleasant Hill Methodist Church, surrounded by tall pine trees and a barren landscape, partially obscured by green leaves in the foreground.

Thanks to Linda Warman Sims & Brenna J. Moore for suggesting this.

Upper Mill Creek Primitive Baptist Church, Bulloch County

Exterior view of a white church building with a gabled roof, featuring multiple entrances and a grassy area surrounding it.

A sign outside notes that this is an “Old Line” Primitive Baptist Church. The congregation was established in 1884.