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"Organized in 1866, New Hope Baptist Church is one of the oldest African American churches in Waco. Noted throughout its history for its excellent church music programs, New Hope is still a vibrant center of worship for Waco's black community...From humble beginnings, New Hope Baptist grew to become one of the more well-known African American congregations in Waco. The church first met in an old foundry building on the corner of Jefferson Avenue and Sixth Street, a dilapidated space the church rented for $2.00 a month. However, this space soon proved insufficient as New Hope's numbers increased. In 1867, New Hope built its first church building, a humble box-shaped structure measuring thirty by forty feet, in partnership with a local Methodist church. Both groups shared the facility, holding services on alternating Sundays. That building did not last very long before it was torn down to make way for a school for African American youth from McLennan County. New Hope rented the school on Sunday mornings for services until 1873, when they were able to construct a modest wooden church structure at another location. In 1884, under the leadership of the church's seventh pastor, a large two-story brick church was constructed for the still-growing church. This building served New Hope until the current church was built in 1923 at the corner of Sixth Street and Marlborough Avenue (now 915 North Sixth Street)...Notable members of New Hope's music ministry through the years include Jules Bledsoe, the grandson of Stephen Cobb and later an international opera star, and Vivienne Malone-Mayes, one of the first African Americans to receive an advanced degree in mathematics and the first African American professor at Baylor University."
link
Audio:
Remembering the Founding of New Hope
ID: 338 ~ Source: Long, Clemmie Holloway and Willie Long Smith, interviewed by Rebecca Sharpless Jimenez, April 16, 1985, in Waco, Texas. Baylor University Institute for Oral History, Waco, TX.
link
Audio:
Remembering the Founding of New Hope
ID: 338 ~ Source: Long, Clemmie Holloway and Willie Long Smith, interviewed by Rebecca Sharpless Jimenez, April 16, 1985, in Waco, Texas. Baylor University Institute for Oral History, Waco, TX.
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