Demolishing a Past: Tremont Temple's Struggles in Macon
The following comes to us Doug Thompson, the new Editor of the Journal of Southern Religion. Doug is an Associate Professor in Southern Studies at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia.
Demolishing
a Past
Early
in November, news sources released reports about two demolition projects. The
first one broke where I reside and involves a zoning request to tear down
Tremont Temple Baptist Church, Macon, GA, to make room for a donut shop. Given the proximity of the Medical Center of
Central Georgia, the addition of that kind of business will be a boondoggle for
the owner and the city. The second report had far greater reverberations in the
national press and comment sections of news outlets. The Atlanta Braves are
leaving Turner Field, which was retrofitted for the team following the Summer
Olympics in 1996. A day after the Braves leveled their surprise, Atlanta
announced plans to demolish Turner Field to create more housing. In one of the
reserved parking lots for Turner Field, fans walk across the painted remains of
the old Fulton County Stadium. Progress means moving on and leaving behind
traces of former glory.
The
lesser known, but not necessarily less significant, story in Macon deserves
some attention for religious historians. In the reports of the church
demolition in Macon, there has been no mention of the church’s attempted move
from the location in 1974. The Tremont Temple’s website explains the long-term effects of that failed move because of
a protracted lawsuit brought by five church members. The physical location of the church building
on Cotton Ave in downtown Macon allowed Reverend Elisha B. Pascal to situate
the church as a “Movement Church.”
Martin Luther King, Jr., spoke from the pulpit
to encourage change in the Jim Crow South and raise money for movement causes.
When rumblings about how the National Baptist Convention stifled civil rights
progress stirred, Pascal led the church to become the seedbed of New Era
Baptist State Convention of Georgia and align with the newly formed Progressive
National Baptist Convention. In the robust growth of the church and the new
economic mobility of its members, and within a decade of those heady moments of
the civil right movement, a new pastor, Reverend Alvin H. Hudson, helped the
church make plans to move to a suburban location on the southwestern edge of
the city. The five members who brought the lawsuit saw the church’s vision
squarely located on the Cotton Ave property. Postponed for almost three
decades, Tremont Baptist Church moved in 2001. And within a decade of that
move, the deteriorated building costs more to fix than demolish.
As
Baptists, it appears important to note that the church is the gathered
community and not the structures, at
least that is what Baptists tell
themselves. Speaking to the P&Z board, Tremont trustee Brenda Cherry asked
the board to let the church move on. “The people
are the church, not the building. And regardless of whether the building is
there or not there, we will always remember what took place at Tremont Temple
Baptist Church and our members are in agreement with that,” Cherry said.
In this case, however, the building has a “history” that as we move through
fiftieth anniversary celebrations of the “movement” causes the economic
progress narrative to ring hollow against the great strivings for civil rights.
In several ways, the church building is important beyond any of the movement
demonstrations because it staked out important space for African Americans in
Jim Crow Macon. Buildings ground communities; the physical house helps make the
home. We tell ourselves that if the walls could talk we would listen. One of
the stories we might hear if we listen is that members of the church had a
vision of growth and prospects beyond those walls, and they tried to sell the
property then. When a church reaches the
elevated status of a movement church, the narrative arc ties them to that place
in time. The majority of members at Tremont Baptist were ready to embrace the
possibilities of economic expansion, but a core group of members saw their
community’s identity in the building wrought out of many decades of struggle.
Had the vision succeeded in 1974 we would likely see a plaque on the site today
and the Medical Center would have expanded its footprint, perhaps keeping some
pieces of the structure. As a community of believers, the church never gave up
the idea that its life existed beyond the walls on Cotton Ave. Their move left
the building in a precarious position, and the congregation financially
strapped to two sites.
I’ll
leave it to the preservationists to figure out how to keep the physical
structure even when the purpose of that structure no longer serves its intended
function. In some ways, preservationists have an easier time. They need to find
ways to keep the structure in tact, often only the faƧade. Historic Macon’s
approach now is to find a way to put the donut shop in the structure, along
with several other retail stores. Historians have to read past the physical
plant and listen to communities of faith struggle with themselves over things
like visions and identity. The Braves are instructive here. Though I, like many
others, think this move is stupid, the team has left cities before and had new
stadiums built, leaving traces everywhere they have been. The sting of every
move was just as palpable in those places as it is in Atlanta, but time creates
distance and different memories. Several weeks ago, Macon was reminded that the
“historic church” had already left the building and they were already creating
distance and building memories. I am struck that there is very little work done
on the physical movement of congregations. When it is addressed at all, the
narrative approach is to see “flight.” I am willing to concede that where I
work on this subject “white” congregations have moved away from changing
neighborhoods, but “black” churches have often done the same thing without the
stigma of “flight.” Churches serve communities, often neighborhoods, but what
happens when those communities move on, congregations are forced to think
through their memories and identity. My guess is that if we spent some time in
Tremont’s meeting minutes and other documents we would find a congregation
struggling to understand itself in a changing context. Their members had
already moved beyond the building’s “neighborhood.” Their mission appears to
have been unhinged from that physical plant more than five decades ago. What
might we learn about churches and religious identity if we paid attention to
congregations’ internal debates and decisions about moving their physical
presence? What might we learn if we paid attention to those decisions outside
the glare of the spectacles that we find in news stories?
Read
more here.
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