2014 Community Service—Bethel AME
Freshmen found themselves part of an important historic restoration Wednesday when they lent their muscle to repairs, landscaping, and moving at the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church building. Crawfordsville Mayor Todd Barton ’00 stopped by to thank the Wabash men for their work. 'You will get out of the community what you put into it,' Barton says. 'Working in this community can teach you how to be leaders.'
Bethel AME is on the National Register of Historic Places and was an important stop on the Underground Railroad. African Americans seeking their freedom from slavery in the South were harbored in the church and the nearby cabin of dedicated abolitionist John Speed. A tunnel connected the two buildings. A remnant of the Speed cabin has since been moved to Lane Place, but a plaque marks its original location. In the background, Wabash students continue their work.
Professor Emeritus Raymond Williams H’68 has coordinated the renovation project and welcomed first the freshmen, and then Mayor Barton, to the site. 'The Bethel congregation has maintained the sanctuary as a beautiful worship space,' Williams said. 'Phase One of our work together are repairs to preserve and protect the outside of the building, and we hope to accomplish that before winter sets in.'