Flat Swamp Church historical marker

Flat Swamp Church (B-45)
B-45

Primitive Baptist. Begun in 1776. First Pastor was John Page. Second building on site. Two miles S.

Location: Jenkins Road at Meeks Road near Parmele
County: Martin
Original Date Cast: 1966

Constituted in 1776, Flat Swamp in Pitt County was among the earliest Primitive Baptist churches in North Carolina. (The subject marker stands in Martin County just north of the Pitt/Martin boundary and indicates that the church is two miles south.) The church sent Henry Ellis and George Williams to Toisnot in Edgecombe County on August 24, 1776, to appeal for the creation of the new church. At that point the church had sixty-three members. John Page, who served the church until 1795, was listed as minister in the records of 1776. The Kehukee Association convened there in 1791 and subsequent years.

In January 1782, Martin Ross (1762-1828) became a member of the church and was baptized by John Page. Two years later the same church granted Ross a license to preach. In 1786 a branch of Flat Swamp church worshipping at Skewarkey Meeting House in Martin County chose Ross as its pastor. Ross, a vigorous and highly respected leader, preached widely in northeastern North Carolina and southeastern Virginia. The church building at Flat Swamp was destroyed by a tornado in 1924 but was quickly rebuilt.

References:
Kehukee Primitive Baptist Association Minutes
Francis M. Manning and W. H. Booker, Martin County History, 2 vols. (1970 and 1979)
Martin County Heritage (1980)
William Saunders, ed., Colonial Records of North Carolina, V, 1177
William S. Powell, ed., Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, V, 252—sketch of Martin Ross by John R. Woodard

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