Embury's
History
Early
records seem to indicate that Methodist preachers began to pay occasional visits
to the Little Silver area (it was not know as Little Silver then, however) as
early as 1785. In 1794, the Freehold Circuit was established and Joseph Totten
was placed in charge. He is said to have changed the location of preaching from
Rumson to the house of Richard Borden of Little Silver Point due to his
religious and political sympathies.
Though
at times the church was locally referred to as the Methodist Church of
Parkerville, the official name as recorded in deeds and the New Jersey
Conference Minutes was the Rumson M.E. Church until the present structure was
built. The lot on which the present Embury Sanctuary is located was purchased
from the Board of Education in August of 1868. A school building which had stood
on the lot was moved to the rear of the adjacent property of Michael Ayers, on
which the Parsonage and Church Hall are now located. At the dedication of the
present sanctuary on February 24, 1869, the church was officially given the name
Embury Methodist Episcopal Church, in honor of Philip Embury, preacher of the
first Methodist congregation to be organized in
Originally,
the parsonage was on the property which stands two doors down from Embury; in
1890 a new parsonage was built across the street from the Church. In 1900 a new
organ, carpets, and the pews that are still in the church were installed. In
1909, the adjacent Ayers property was purchased and the brick wall surrounding
all of the property was built. The rear of the Ayers property was added to the
cemetery, and the new cemetery named "
At
the rear of the property is the church hall, and several events took place
there. Traveling medicine shows once took place there, and the "Wide
Awakes,", a local basketball team, played there. School events took place
there, and the first grades of the public school attended there for a while as
well. Currently, it is used for community groups, Sunday School Classes, Church
social events, exercise classes, and scout meetings.
In
1912, beautiful stained glass memorial windows were installed in the sanctuary,
replacing the clear glass. A major renovation took place in 1925 which provided
a new pipe organ, central lighting, and other improvements.
A
parking lot was added in 1952, after the dry cleaning establishment occupying
the property was destroyed in an explosion. In 1958, classrooms and a stage were
added to the Church Hall. The next major renovation took place in 1959, when a
new floor was installed, new carpet laid, and a new decorating scheme
established.
In
1966, the decision was made to further expand the church, and a basement, choir
room, parlor, office, pastor's study, church library, kitchenette (the larger
kitchen, in the Church Hall was too far away to be particularly useful), and
additional classrooms were added, connecting the Church Hall and the Sanctuary.
In
1988, the sanctuary was completely redone. Flooring was relaid, a new ceiling
and wall fixtures were added, regilding of organ pipes, redone balcony, new
wiring, new insulation, replaced choir curtains, kneeling pad, and a new carpet
were all installed. Services were held in the Church Hall during this
renovation.