Burns United Methodist Church (1866- )

March 25, 2014 
/ Contributed By: Casey Graham

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Burns United Methodist Church in Des Moines

Courtesy C.A. Tucker (CC BY-SA 3.0)

“Image Ownership: C.A. Tucker (CC BY-SA 3.0)”

Burns United Methodist Church (UMC) in Des Moines, Polk County, Iowa, is the oldest still-operating historically African American congregation in the state of Iowa. It was originally organized in 1866 as the Black Methodist Episcopal Church of Iowa, during a decade in which there were fewer than two dozen black residents of Polk County. After the Civil War, northern Methodists attempted to organize blacks, both free from birth and newly free, into Methodist congregations. It later changed its name to commemorate Francis Burns (1809-1863), the first African American bishop in the Methodist Episcopal Church.

The congregation has met at many different locations over the course of its existence. Upon its founding, it first met in the same building as the city’s segregated school for black children. In 1873, the church built a small chapel, and then relocated to a larger building on East Second and Maple Street in the 1880s. In 1903, it constructed a new church building at Twelfth and Crocker Streets.

In the 1920s, the congregation arranged to purchase the building owned by the Crocker Hill Methodist Church at 811 Crocker Street for $7,000. A fire in 1947 badly damaged this building, but the church was restored.  In 2011, the congregation moved into the building formerly occupied by Gatchel United Methodist Church, at 1909 Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway in Des Moines.

At all of these locations, the church offered Sunday school, sponsored literary societies and musical programs, and hosted charitable activities.

In 1977, Burns UMC was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Author Profile

Casey Graham is a graduate student of history at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington. He received his BA in history from Baylor University in Waco, Texas, in 2010 and received his MA in 2014 from the University of Washington-Seattle. His interests are politics and culture in the twentieth-century United States, particularly the construction and uses of folk music; public history; and collective memory. He has conducted research on Communist musical culture in the 1930s and 1940s and the “freedom song” movement of the 1960s African American civil rights movement.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Graham, C. (2014, March 25). Burns United Methodist Church (1866- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/burns-united-methodist-church-1866/

Source of the Author's Information:

Charline J. Barnes and Floyd Bumpers, Iowa’s Black Legacy (Chicago:
Lincoln Publishing, 2000); Nancy Curtis, Black Heritage Sites: An
African American Odyssey and Finder’s Guide
(Chicago: American Library
Association, 1996).

Further Reading