With a history that goes back to the early 1740's, Salem
Presbyterian Church is a new church charting a course into God's unknown and
exciting future.
Salem Church is a congregation of people with a rich heritage going back to the
first Presbyterians in Hanover County. In the 1740's a Hanover bricklayer named
Samuel Morris, along with several devote neighbors, withdrew from the state
approved Anglican Church and held services centered in the reading of
scripture. After a period of difficulty with local officials, this
"reading house" finally obtained permission from the state to worship
as Presbyterians under the 1689 Act of Toleration. In 1746 this developing
congregation called a young and energetic Presbyterian minister, Samuel Davies,
to be its pastor. Under Davies' able leadership, the Pole Green Presbyterian
Church was officially organized in 1748.
In 1813, or possibly earlier, a presbyterian congregation was organized at
Hanover-Town. This congregation moved to what is now Studley in 1829 and took
the name Salem Presbyterian Church. The Salem and Pole Green churches united
this same year, 1829, to become the United Church of Salem and Pole Green, one
church in two locations. The United church in the 1840's established the Beulah
congregation in what is now Cold Harbor. During the Civil War, the Pole
Green building was destroyed and the congregation there began to worship with
the Salem congregation. (Today, a granite memorial and memorial park marks the
location of the former Pole Green Church building.)
Because of difficult times after the War, in 1872 the United Church of Salem
and Pole Green, including the Beulah congregation, united with the Bethlehem
Presbyterian Church. The resulting union, the Samuel Davies Presbyterian
Church, worshipped and ministered as one united church comprised of three
congregations: Salem, Bethlehem, and Beulah.
The three congregations of the one, united Samuel Davies Presbyterian Church
continued until 1973, when the Bethlehem Church was organized as a separate
church. Salem and Beulah, the continuing church from the original Hanover
Presbyterian congregation at Pole Green, remained the Samuel Davies
Presbyterian Church. In 1985 each of these congregations, however, was
organized by Hanover Presbytery as an individual church.
Today, the Salem Presbyterian Church grateful for its heritage, looks toward
the future confident that the God almighty who provided for her in the past
will equip her mightily for ministry in the days & years to come..