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![]() Marquardt Lutheran Church, 3.5 miles northwest of Monroeville, Ind., ca. 1975. Founded in 1883, Marquardt was originally a member of the General Synod. Its brick building was constructed in 1883. By 1970, Marquardt had the smallest membership of any active congregation in the Indiana-Kentucky Synod of the Lutheran Church in America. It now has 18 members. |
"I
see them now, brave men and braver women, eyes front to all that need be
to make a good life in a strange new land. Toilers in the harvest fields,
sweat streaks gathering dust and rust, hands calloused from plow-handles
and pitchfork, scarred by thorny weeds in harsh grain-bundles; and their
women folk beside them or in their homes about endless tasks – household
conveniences as yet un-invented. All, men and women, young and old, busy
from sunup till beyond sundown, uncomplaining in their fellowship of toil.
Come Sunday at the white church, their horses fly-brushing at the long hitch-rack, I hear the slow cadence of their hymns and the voice of their minister. I listen in again to the clusters lingering long about the church door as they hear and tell of success or failure, of joy or sorrow, of fear and hope and faith." --T.F.
Gullixson,
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| The typical 19th-century
Midwestern Lutheran congregation was rural. Immigrants from Germany,
Scandinavia, and other European countries, along with second-, third-, and
fourth-generation American Lutherans from eastern states, came to the
Midwest, seeking land, freedom, and opportunity, and bringing their
religion.
The steady migration of Americans from the farms to the cities began after the Civil War and was spurred by the First and Second World Wars. By the late 1920s, only 47 percent of Lutherans lived in rural or small-town settings, compared with 44 percent of the general population. At that same time, however, nearly 70 percent of Lutheran congregations were rural. In his 1916 book, The Lutheran Church in the Country, G.H. Gerberding warned that large corporate farms, run by tenants, would cause the rural community and the Lutheran Church to suffer. |
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This exhibit was originally presented at the 2001 Churchwide Assembly held in Indianapolis, Ind. Please contact the ELCA Archives at archives@elca.org with any comments or questions. |
| Trinity
Lutheran Church, six miles east of Meredosia, Ill., ca. 1975. Trinity, which had been organized in 1881 as a member of the General Synod, purchased its first building from another congregation in 1881. In 1915 Trinity constructed a new building, pictured above, 1½ miles west of the old site. |
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