Browse Items (12 total)

  • Tags: history

Rev. Ronda Horton.jpg
Horton attended school at the Salem Mennonite Mission Church and Orphanage even though he was not an orphan. The influence of the Mennonite missionaries had a great influence on him as a child, and in 1935, he became the minister of the Boone…

junaluska-rgb.jpg
The Junaluska Heritage Association formed in 2011 as a a community based organization created to preserve cultural heritage and assist in preserving and growing the community itself. Since that time, the Boone Mennonite Brethren Church has served as…

JunaluskaSoldiers.JPG
The Mennonite faith stresses the value of non-violence and for that reason, some members of the church did not serve during World War II; however, there were still men in Junaluska (and a few from the church) that entered the military. Some of these…

praise.jpg
Praise activity in the Boone Church

Junaluska Community Map_Keefe (1).pdf
Numbered parcels indicate land owned by black members of the community, as identified by Virgil Greer in 1998.

JunaluskaPropertyMap.jpg
This map shows the progression of home ownership in the neighborhood (Junaluska and the larger surrounding area), with some of these parcels actually pre-dating the community's name, "Junaluska." According to Sandra Hagler, a longtime resident and…

a2f05708-b673-473e-9b4a-22509dbca5bb.jpg
In 1917 Rev. Joseph and Kathania Tschetter began holding Mennonite services in the Junaluska community’s school house. A congregation of eight original members was established, and by 1918 the Boone Brethren Mennonite Church was founded where it…
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2