Church vandalized on Old Nashville Highway

Sam Stockard, The Murfreesboro Post, June 8, 2017

Barely a month after a local group erected a marker at Ebenezer Primitive Baptist Church recognizing its historical significance, someone vandalized the building overnight this week.

Please click here to visit the page from the May 6, Decoration Day at Ebenezer Primitive Baptist Church and the Stones River National Battlefield.

Dr. George Smith, Treasurer of the African American Heritage Society of Rutherford County

Vandals broke out the glass in the small church building, sprayed fire extinguishers inside, broke its van windows and wrote cuss words on the back of the van, according to George Smith, treasurer for the African American Heritage Society of Rutherford County. The damage was discovered June 8.

The group doesn’t know whether its efforts to bring attention to the church had anything to do with the vandalism, but no racial slurs were written on the property, according to Smith.

Authorities are investigating to try to find the culprits and told church officials the Old Nashville Highway area had been through a series of break-ins, Smith said.

The historically black church dates back to the 1880s, and the society group recently posted a marker there to let people know it was part of the Cemetery community, which was started by freed slaves and soldiers of the U.S. Colored Troops who were hired to reinter bodies after the Civil War, according to Smith.

Located on Old Nashville Highway not far from the Stones River National Battlefield visitors’ center, the church also survived an effort by the federal government to get rid of it, according to Smith.

When the federal government started buying land to establish the battlefield park, it threatened to burn down the church and take its land, Smith said.

“The founding members of that church, rather than see it be burned down, put it on logs and rolled that church to its current location,” Smith said. “Of course, it’s not the original building there. But there’s a story there, what they went through to preserve their church.”

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