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HISTORY
The First Existentialist
Congregation of Atlanta began in 1976 as weekly Celebration of Life
services, held each Friday in a private home under the guidance of minister
and founder R. Lanier Clance (now minister emeritus). The First Existentialist
Church, as it was known, incorporated later that same year, with the stated
purpose to create and maintain an existential community based on existential
philosophy and psychology. In 1978 the membership voted to join with the
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations. To better reflect
this relationship, it was decided the Church would operate as a federated
society of Existentialists and Existentialist/Unitarian Universalists.
As our membership grew, we continued Friday services at the Decatur YMCA,
changing to Sunday mornings in 1978.
In 1980, the Congregation
assumed ownership of the Phoenix Unitarian Universalist Fellowship property
at 470 Candler Park Drive. Later that decade, the name was changed to
The First Existentialist Congregation of Atlanta to reflect our commitment
to diversity and inclusion.
Rev. Lanier Clance
retired in 2001, and after an interim period the congregation installed
Rev. Janna Nelson as full-time minister in September 2003. Rev. Marsha
Mitchiner, who has served since 1992, continued as associate minister.
In July 2005 the congregation became a fellowship with Rev. Marsha Mitchiner
serving part time as our Fellowship Minister.
The Old Stone Church Atlanta, GA 30307-Early
1900s
History Project
Edgewood / Candler
Park Community Investigations Collaboration
Our intent is to engage in research of the early biracial history and
dynamics of the
City of Edgewood / Candler Park neighborhood of the late 1800s-early 1900s.
Our historic anchor
and springboard is the Old Stone Church on Candler Park Dr.
now theFirst Existentialist Congregation of Atlanta.
At this time, we have
a foundation for further investigation in the 1994-95 research (including
artifacts and oral histories) of Amy Meyer Burns, a former honors history
student at GSU,. Ms. Burns is now an attorney with the GA Dept of Law,
specializing in citizen and consumer rights. Amy is delighted to be working
with us now to share and uncover more of the buried bi-racial history
of our immediate neighborhood. Three pending irrigation and water course
projects within Candler Park City Park are scheduled for 2006, utilizing
substantial Environmental Protection Agency and City of Atlanta monies.
This has given us further impetus to bring timely attention to the historic
and archaeological significance of early African American residential
activities within the Park. It is our hope that making our research known
to the neighborhood, the City, and the EPA - before earth-moving operations
begin - will encourage a public sensitivity and recognition of the historic
reality and legacy of this pioneering African American community of 1870s-1940s.
The beginnings of
the area called Candler Park can be traced back to a city called Edgewood
formally incorporated in 1888 The 1910 census shows the population of
the area was 59% black and 41% white. The racial makeup of the area
between 1910 and 1920 shifted to 89% white and 11% black. It was during
this time that the Antioch Baptist Church belonging to a black.. congregation
was burned on (what is now) Oakdale Road, and rebuilt on (what is now)
Candler Park Drive. This black community developed in the late nineteenth
century on what would become the southwest edge of Candler Park. The
development began when a white, married woman bought a piece of property,
subdivided it, and sold it to black individuals. These individuals and
their families developed it into a thriving community, with two major
institutions, a church and a social lodge. Amy Meyer (Burns) 1995
Above is the seed
of up-welled information and passionate interest that drives this neighborhood
arts and education collaboration proposal. It dovetails potently into
the city-wide initiative to honor the centennial of the 1906 Atlanta
Race Riot, this Sept. 22-25. Among other activities, we are moving to
make a meaningful connection with Antioch East Baptist Church - the
original, Edgewood site-linked African-American church community of
the 1906 period - and its historic legacy in the Candler Park neighborhood;
to cooperate in an inclusive exploration of the Sanctuary's early history
in the community of Edgewood and Candler Park; to initiate discussion
toward a meaningful connection between Antioch East and the current
stewards of the still-standing "old stone church" structure
that their ancestors built by hand from 1918-22.
Since 1980, the
historic Sanctuary has been cared for by the present owners, First Existentialist
Congregation of Atlanta. We envision moving forward into the present
with a formal welcoming of the Antioch founders/ builders of the historic
stone Sanctuary, to the 30th Existential Founders Day Celebration this
September. At that time, we hope to be able to unveil an historic marker
that recognizes the origins and rich content and context of the Sanctuary
site at 470 Candler Park Drive. The timing flows effectively with the
September 1906 focus as well. The generous grounds at 470 provide a
potential historic site for 1906-related site art.
More
About The Old Stone Church
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