F iJi 12A RELIGION / The Charlotte Post Thursday, May 22,1997 CHURCH NEWS News of note •Hampton University will host it 83rd Minister’s Conference, June 2-6. This year’s theme will be “The Future of the Black Church; Where Are We Going and How Do We Get There?" Invited speakers and panelists include, Bishop John Hurst Adams, Bishop Cecil Bishop, Bishop Nathaniel Linsey and Dr. Henry Lyons. For more infor mation, call (757)727-5255. Keller Avenue and Senior Drive Revival services continue through Friday at 7 p.m. Guest speaker, the Rev. Walter S. Thomas of New Psalmist Baptist in Baltimore, Md. Church in Winston-Salem, 7 p.m. Friday •The Catholic Diocese of Charlotte recently purchased a new facility on Church Street. The new building will house 95 diocese employees now scat tered throughout Charlotte at five dif ferent locations. Employees will move into the building by fall. The 46 county Diocese serves nearly 100,000 Catholics in western North Carolina. •J. B. Ministries 2300 Statesville Ave. Anniversary service at 7:30 p.m. Guest speaker, 13-year old Ned Barnes. •Bethany Baptist Church 4700 WUlard St. Pastoral anniversary banquet, McDonald Cafeteria, 2812 Beatties Ford Road. Speaker, the Rev. Robert Leak of New St. John Baptist. Tickets, $20. For more information, contact Claudette King at 333-5874. • Trinity Park Baptist Church 9115 Trinity Road Concert featuring Anson High School Gospel Choir, 4 p.m. James Ephraim of McClintock Presbyterian Church. 4630 or (888)599-4630. •First Mount Calvary Baptist 209 W. 28th St. Deacon and Deaconess Program, 3 p.m. Speaker is the Rev. William Richardson of Mount Pisgah Baptist Church. •Nazareth Primitive Baptist 2230 Bancroft St. 120th church anniversary, 4 p.m. • Steele Creek AME Zion 1500 Shopton Road Choir Concert 5 p.m. featiiring the Steele Creek CJospel Choir. •Clement Memorial AME Zion 2207 Newland Road Choir concert featuring the Turner Family, 3 p.m. Upcoming Events Saturday •Faith Community Independent Church 701 Hovis Road Choir concert featuring Faithful Travel singers at 7:30 p.m. Services continue Saturday at 7 p.m. •South Tryon Presbyterian 931 Wilann Drive Conference speaker is the Rev. Anthony Jinwright of Salem Baptist Church, 6 p.m. •Greater Mount Zion Baptist 2311 Crescent Lane Gastonia Twelve Tribe rally, 3 p.m. •Shepherd’s Fold AME Zion 426 West Blvd. Family and Friends Day, 11 a.m. Wednesday •Zion’s Renaissance Expo ‘97 through May 31 at the Adam’s Mark Hotel. For more information, call 599- • Little Rock AME Zion 401 N. McDowell St. “Legacies of Courage,” May 30-31 at 6:30 p.m. Written and directed by Cheryl “Sparkle” Mosley. For more information, call 334-3782. Thursday • South Tryon Presbyterian 931 Wilann Drive The church will continue its second annual “Conference on the Spirit” though Saturday. Workshop topics: The Holy Spirit’s Role in Prayer, Knowing the Heartbeat of Ck>d, and The Spirit In You begin at 9 a.m. Evening speaker in the Rev. Loran Livingston, Central Church of (3od, 7 p.m. Registration $20. One day fee, $5. • First Mayfield Memorial Baptist 901 Oaklawn Ave. Tenth annual Family Fellowship Celebration through Sunday. Tonight: Gospel singing featuring Temple Baptist Church Choir, Love Centered Choir, Reeder Memorial Baptist, 7 p.m. • First Mayfield Memorial Baptist 901 Oaklawn Ave. Fish fry and picnic, noon-5 p.m. •East Stonewall AME Zion 1729 Griers Grove Road Men’s Choir concert, sponsored by Deaconess Board, 3 p.m. •University Park Baptist •South 'Tryon Presbyterian 931 Wilann Drive Workshop topics - 'The Mechanics of Prayer, Prayer Without Ceasing, How and When God Answers Prayer, 9 p.m. Evening speaker is the Rev. Dwight Bryant of Mount Carmel Baptist •Noah’s Ark Outreach Ministry will host the 'Transit Singers of Charlotte, the Voyager Trio of Gastonia at the Radisson Grand Hotel, Dogwood Room 1. Services begin at 1 p.m. Keynote speaker is the Rev. James Milsap of Knoxgrove Baptist Church. • Silver Mount Baptist 501 West Arrowood Road Young People’s Choir Concert, 6 p.m. •New St. John Baptist 2000 St. John’s Church Road 11 a.m. message, “Be Ye Also Reader; It’s Up to You.” GALILEE BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. EA. Griffin, PASTOR Sunday School 9:45a.m. Simday Worship 11:00a.m. Sunday School Study - Wed. 7pm Prayer Service - 8pm 2933 Shady Lane • Charlotte, NC 28208 333-0810 •University Park Baptist 2400 Keller Ave. District III Usher’s Meeting 10 a.m. Sunday •St. Paul Baptist 1401 Allen St. Monthly NAACP Religious Emphasis Service, 6 p.m. Speaker is the Rev. SIMPSON-GILLESPIE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Dr. Carl Arrington, Senior Pastor Marker of bishop and shriner found Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. Sxmday Worship - 11:00 a.m. Bible Study, Wednesdays - 7rfX) p.m. 3545 Beatties Ford Rd. • (704) 399-2717 Continued from 11A “It was owned by a white family by the name of Misenheimer,”, McCarroll said. “In later years, I think a group of African Americans purchased it.” A partially obscured marker at Bruce’s grave reads “First President of the Cedar Grove Cemetery.” McCarroll, who has spent more than 60 years in the funeral busi ness, remembers the cemetery well. He also remembers who is buried there. At one point it was a veritable Who’s Who in black Charlotte. There are some Nelsons, some Averys, Bishop Bruce, the Reids and Browns out there,” McCarroll said. “The Rev. L.B. West, a minister at Brooklyn Presbyterian is buried out there, too.” and trash. “It was horrible,” Roberts said. “People were afraid to walk out there. And it’s so close to the school. Drug users and dealers were all that you saw.” Even people who had relatives buried there were afraid to visit. 'That all began to change two years ago. Roberts, head of the Taylor/LaSalle Community Watch Program, began a cam paign to clean up Cedar Grove a couple of years ago. For some of the volunteers, Saturday’s effort had special meaning. Patricia Ferguson’s mother and five other relatives are buried at Cedar Grove. She looks forward to the day when she can come out to the cemeteiy alone and not have to watch for danger. vX" y-- V*'*-,’ Above, Bruce’s granite and marble marker. Volunteers found the fallen marker Saturday. Wnow P.O. Box 23509 Charlotte, NC 28227 704-332-8764 Bus. Line 704-882-9669 Studio Line 704-882-1330 Fax 1 A M 1 0 3 0 Interracial Interdenominational Christian Programming for The Carolinas The Mission Church of The Lord Jesus Christ Powerhouse of Praise With Pastor Aaron Raley Monday - Friday 2:30 - 2;45PM Paston Aaron Raley McCarroll said the cemetery changed hands again in the ‘40s or ‘50s. It was bought by John S. Davidson, owner of Davidson Brothers Funeral Home. Davidson renamed the cemetery Cedar Hill. It was meticulously maintained for years by two men known only as “Mr. Johnson” and after Johnson’s death, “Mr. Dixon.” ’Ihey mowed the lawns and kept up the white plastic fences, chains and bricks borders that separated plots. Johnson lived in a house where University Park Elementary School sits now. Longtime neighbors remember a neat house with horses and a caretaker who worked the grounds daily. McCarroll was left in charge of maintenance in the ‘60s when an aging Davidson moved, to Tfennessee to live with his daugh ter. “I kept it up as long as Mr. Davidson lived,” McCarroll said. “After he died none of his daugh ters could take it They tried to give it to the dty, but no one wanted it 'That’s when it grew over.” McCarroll estimates more than 1,000 people are buried at the cemetery. “There are graves out there without markers,” McCarroll said. There are graves out there underneath the road that goes around the cemetery. “There are a lot of people out there.” ‘This used to be a beautifiil cemetery years ago when I was a younger girl,” Ferguson said. “Nothiirg but greenery. We had a caretaker that took care of the graves. Once Mr. Johnson passed, individual families took care of their own plots. But I guess peo ple have just moved away and loved ones have been forgotten.” Saturday was just the first of many clean-up days at the ceme tery. Mixed in with the trash were the remains of hundreds of plas tic and silk flowers left over the years by relatives. Small faded purple flowers sit atop the grave of Virginia Dare Reid. A wreath of bright red flowers sits near Jannie Brice’s grave. For Roberts, cleaning the ceme tery up is just the beginning. She already has her sights set on the vacant lot across the street. “We’re going to clean it up,” Roberts said as she gestured to the piles of trash. Tt’s going to be nice again. We just need for the famihes to come out to help.” Tiny purple flowers Over the years, the once-proud cemetery deteriorated. Prostitutes and derelicts made their homes among the markers. Mattresses and beer bottles lined that pathways that cut around the graves. Markers were covered with dirt In places, the remains of pine boxes were exposed by water erosion. Saturday’s clean-up yielded dozens of boxes of beer bottles Planning Your Family Reunion? 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