Our Heritage
Drawn Together by God's Love

On a
hot mid-July evening in 1851, sixteen
people gathered in the small southwest-central Arkansas
village of Arkadelphia.
Though not incorporated, the village on the banks of the Ouachita River was the
center of much of the political and social life of Clark County. The town
had been founded, according to tradition, in 1810 by a blacksmith named Adam
Blakely. The county for which it was the seat of government after 1842 antedated Arkansas' statehood, and had been the third county formed. Like
most of the state, the sparsely populated county of just over 4000 inhabitants
remained frontier until well after the Civil War. And Arkadelphia, on that
July 15, 1851, owed its meager population to the lucky combination of two
features. First, the community perched on the bluff above the river;
second, it was situated on one of the few roads in the fifteen-year-old-state--
the road between the state capitol at Little Rock on the Arkansas River and the
Gateway to Texas, Hempstead County. These people meeting that hot evening,
who comprised a significant portion of the village's 250 inhabitants, were not
directly concerned with Arkadelphia's political or social amenities. That
night, they were concerned that the county seat of Clark County had no Baptist
church.
From the first meeting of
the fellowship which formed the First Baptist Church of Arkadelphia, the
pattern for future development existed. All the actions on that and
subsequent evenings were part of a covenant agreement, a covenant the members
made among themselves, with other Baptists, and with God. A covenant of
people "Drawn Together by God's Love."
Ray Granade, PhD

Heritage
Room
The heritage room is located on the first floor
off of the Pine Street entrance of the church. The room contains
historical items and pictures from the church's past. An old chandelier
used years previously in the sanctuary hangs above the rectangular table that was
donated in honor of Mrs. Agnus Coppenger, a long time FBC member who lived an
exemplary Christ-like life. The stain glass
windows used in the room were taken from the old sanctuary.
