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The Walters Class and surrounding country was taken up in 1880
as a mission and called Humboldt Mission. The Rev. S.A. Pettit was
appointed to the Humboldt Mission in 1883 and the appropriation
was $175.00. At the end of this conference year it was reported
that there had been 15 new converts and 40 received into church
membership. Total membership not was 57. The Humboldt Mission work
must have extended as far east as Verdon, as the history of the
Sunday school work states that in 1883 Rev. Pettit started preaching
services in the Dawson community and in 1884 the first church was
erected on the present building site.
Dawson's first annual conference was held in the Church, March
11, 1887. It was the 7th annual session of the Platte River Conference.
Local pastors salary was $550 for the year. In 1889 it was reported
that the Dawson Mission has two appointments, one in town and one
51/2 miles northeast. Dawson had a good church building and parsonage
free of debt. They had two Sunday schools, two seminary students
an
active Christian Endeavor, and a very active W.M.S. They paid a
tidy sum of $451.77 on the parsonage debt that year. In 1899 Dawson
stood alone
.the Verdon charge was dropped from them, and it
was reported that the spiritual condition was improving in the church.
During the next few years under the leadership of M.T. Maze the
church continued to grow and prosper. In 1912 H.S. Tool became the
pastor. In 1917 A.E. Miller was appointed pastor at Dawson and C.
F. Heim Maple Grove and the Verdon congregations. In 1918 W. W.
Underkoffler was assigned to the Dawson Evangelical Church.
In 1921 annual conference was to meet in the Dawson Church for
its 25th session but the destruction of the church by fire on August
1st, 1921 made a change necessary and Hastings was selected. The
Dawson Church had been redecorated with paint both within and without.
This with some improvements on the parsonage amounted to $600. The
burning of the church seemed to be a real calamity and to say the
least was a great disappointment to the Dawson Congregation. The
fire had hardly died down when the pastor and people said, "We
shall arise and build" and within six days over $20,000 was
subscribed for a new church. This was increased to $21, 642., and
now with the $6000 insurance they will be able to build a $30,000
church. The plans were already in preparation.
At conference in 1922 it was reported that the Dawson Evangelical
Congregation had erected a fine new church at a total cost of $32,000
which with the exception of the $6000 insurance received, was pledged
by the people and practically all paid by the day of dedication.
The new Church was dedicated on June 4th, 1922 by Bishop M. T. Maze.
The Rev. W.W.Underkoffler was reappointed to the pastorate at Dawson.
The Dawson Church is now the Dawson Bethel United Methodist Church
and continues to pay its conference askings, and is pastored by
a student pastor attending the UM School of Theology in Kansas City,
Missouri.
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