

The history of Outlaw's Bridge Universalist
Church begins in 1824 with the birth of Julia Elizabeth Kent in Craven
County, NC. In 1841, at the age of sixteen, Julia met and married Bryan
Outlaw and moved with her new husband to a farm in Outlaw's Bridge, Duplin
County, NC where the couple raised a family of six children.
In 1866 an epidemic swept through the area taking many lives including
the lives of Julia's husband and two of her sons. Throughout this
ordeal Julia, a woman of unflinching faith in God, found comfort in the
words of traveling Universalist ministers who visited Duplin county
preaching the revolutionary doctrine of universal salvation.
This new idea of universal salvation was so personally appealing to
Julia that she decided to spread the word to others. On a Sunday morning
in July of 1869 she began her ministry under the shade of a large tree at
the corner of Outlaw's Bridge Road and NC Route 111. That first morning
Julia taught a group of fourteen children. This gathering was truly
remarkable in a staunchly Baptist and Methodist area where opposition to
the freethinking ideas of Universalism was loudly voiced.
Despite continuing opposition, the Sunday School continued to grow
throughout the years that followed. Classes were held in a schoolhouse
that stood near the location of the present church.
As the children from Julia's original Sunday School grew to adulthood,
they and others who had embraced Universalism decided it was time to build
a permanent structure dedicated to their Universalist faith. In 1905
the Outlaw's Bridge Universalist Church was formally organized. In 1907
church members, donating their time and materials, began the construction
of a white frame church building at the site of Julia's first Sunday
School meeting. The land was deeded to the congregation by Charity
Elizabeth Outlaw whose Universalist faith had been shaped by her
attendance at the Sunday School.
The dedication ceremony for the new church took place on October 20,
1907. During the ceremony a constitution which declared "the Universal
Fatherhood of God, the spiritual leadership of Jesus and the brotherhood
of all mankind" was adopted. In her letters reporting the day's events
Charity Outlaw proudly notes that, in accordance with Universalist values
recognizing the equality of the sexes, a woman, Patience Sutton, had been
named as one of two deacons to the new church--an amazing choice in the
year 1907. In 1937 Charity Elizabeth donated a second parcel of land
next to the church for a parsonage which was also built by the church
members. This new home for the minister and his family was "state of the
art" in 1937 with running water, indoor plumbing and the luxury of heated
bedrooms and is today the home of our current minister Rev. Justin Lapoint,
his wife Rachel and their son John.
The congregation continued to thrive in their little white church until
tragedy struck on Easter Sunday morning of 1950. The church's source
of heat, a wood burning stove, had been lit early that morning in
preparation for the Easter services. A spark from the stove started a
small fire on the roof and was seen by a member who sounded the alarm.
As part of a very interesting article written for
the June 1950 issue of The Bulletin (the newsletter of the Association of
Universalist Women which still meets monthly at the church) the minister,
Leonard C. Prater, reports that as the members saw the fire begin to spread,
"All of us were stunned into silence but the people went right to work
clearing the building. Even the furious blaze could not keep people from
taking the pews, piano, pulpit, everything unattached, out of the
building." The church's newly built annex started to burn and Rev. Prater
continues, "Meanwhile, men were clearing the annex of furnishings. Even
the windows and doors were taken out." "While all this was going on,
others, including myself organized an effort to save the parsonage."
As you will see on your first visit to Outlaw's
Bridge Universalist Church, the original parsonage was saved.
Unfortunately by 11:30 of that Easter Sunday morning in 1950 the fire had
been contained but the church had been consumed. In the spirit of Easter,
services were held outdoors near the parsonage and that afternoon the
members met to make plans for a new church to rise from the ashes and,
according to Rev. Prater, agreed on at least one point--the next church
would be built "of less inflammable materials."
The congregation set to work immediately and by 1951
the rebuilding was completed and the new church opened its doors. These
same doors stand open today, ready to welcome you and your family into our
church family at Outlaw's Bridge Universalist Church. The
pioneering spirit of Julia Kent Outlaw and the legacy of those fearless
firefighters of 1950 remains alive with us today as we look forward to
sharing with you the freethinking, liberal religious beliefs that
Unitarian Universalism has to offer. When you come to visit with us at
Outlaw's Bridge Universalist Church our hope is that you will want to stay
and join with us, becoming a part of our ongoing history and our
continuing commitment to Julia Outlaw's dream of spreading the good news
of universal salvation.
|