Bethel A.M.E. Church
Centreville, Maryland
Queen Anne's County
Founded: 1877
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church (Bethel A.M.E.) was moved to a new location and rebuilt in 1988 outside of town on Spaniard Neck Road. The original church sat in the middle of what is now the parking lot behind the District Court building on North Liberty Street in Centreville, Maryland.
Janes United Methodist Church
Chestertown, Maryland
Kent County
Founded: 1866
(Current location built in 1914 after fire)
The first church was located on or at the lower end of Princess St. and now Queen St. going towards Quaker Neck. Land was conveyed to the trustees. A fire destroyed the original church on March 8, 1914. The fire occurred one week from the day of the laying of the cornerstone of the new Janes Methodist Memorial Church located on the corner of Cross and Cannon Sts. The new church building was dedicated on November 8, 1914.
New St. John's United Methodist Church
also known as Tilghman United Methodist,
Wittman, Maryland
Talbot County
Founded: 1897
Also known as Tilghman United Methodist, the parish hall was the first Black church in the Bay Hundred area. The land was purchased in 1804 for 96 cents by John and Mary Kersey. Nearby, the all-White congregation worshipped in Asbury Church (current location of St. John's). In 1897 when the White congregation moved to a church in the more populated area of Wittman, the Black congregation moved into Asbury church and renamed it St. John Methodist Episcopal Church. The original church became their parish house.
Mt. Vernon United Methodist Church
also known as Salem United Methodist
near Church Hill, Maryland
Queen Anne's County
Founded: 1878 Rebuilt: 1965
Mt. Vernon United Methodist Church sits in a small community called Salem along U.S. Highway 213, five miles north of Centreville. Though the organization of the first church is not on record, family history carries the message that families met in neighboring homes to worship. Salem's first church building was purchased from a White congregation. In 1878 the Blacks of the Salem community erected a new church. This church was in operation until 1956, at which time the structure was destroyed by fire. Services were held in a building on an adjoining lot, formerly a one-room school, until a new church was erected in 1965. The church is also known locally as Salem United Methodist.
Photographer Yvette Hynson was born and raised on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. She graduated from Queen Anne’s High School and earned her BA in Sociology from Washington College and a master’s degree in Nonprofit Management from University College at the University of Maryland. Always interested in church history and architecture, Hynson spent several years traveling around the Eastern Shore, photographing and documenting African American churches. Her photos have been exhibited at Sumner Hall in Chestertown. In 2012, she published a book of church photographs titled “No Ways Tired: African-American Churches on Maryland’s Eastern Shore.” Hynson, who sings in her church choir, is also the creator and host of a popular local radio show, The Sunday Jazz Experience, broadcast every Sunday at 6:00 pm on WKHS-FM at 90.5.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk