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Trinity Episcopal Church

906 Padon Street
903-753-3366

History:
Begun through the efforts of Estelle Wright Honea, Trinity has maintained an Episcopal community in Longview for over 100 years. Our history is not in buildings, but in people...people who have shared their lives and faith to make this place a very unique community within the city of Longview.

It was a fine East Texas day, the first of April, 1887, when Samuel Harrison Wright and his wife Ada arrived in Longview, Texas, from Virginia. Sam had been a young broker on Wall Street, but had a burning desire to go to Texas, much against the wishes of his family. Nevertheless, Sam and Ada arrived in Longview with their four children, Esther, Estelle, Maude, and Charles. It was just a crude little railroad town and most of the jobs were in farming cotton. Sam landed a job as a dispatcher for the railroad.

The Wright family were staunch Episcopalians, but there was no Episcopal Church in Longview for them. They attended other services, but cherished the hope of their own Episcopal Church. Estelle had a particularly beautiful contralto voice and sang in the church choir at the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. On her way to church on Thanksgiving Day, 1892, Estelle was pleased to notice an Episcopal minister on the street. She stopped and introduced herself to the Rev. Charles M. Beckwith and invited him to share Thanksgiving dinner with the Wright family. The Rev. Beckwith, as fate would have it, turned out to be the Missionary of the Texas Diocese at that time.

Following dinner, Mr. Beckwith was taking his leave when Sam Wright, abashed that he had no cigars to offer his distinguished guest, thrust a dollar bill into his hand and begged him to supply himself with cigars as he passed through downtown. The Rev. Beckwith, instead, turned to Miss Estelle Wright, who had been talking of her ambition to see an Episcopal Church built in Longview, placed the dollar in her hand and said, "Let this be the first dollar contributed toward building an Episcopal Church here."

Estelle, heartened by the thought, secured a box and took up a family collection that netted $3 more. This money she kept as a nest egg for the new church. She collected a total of $30 in the community and sent the money to Bishop George H. Kinsolving, Bishop of the Diocese of Texas, for safekeeping. That $30 was part of the first payment of $300 spent on the church building.

In 1894, General Missionary Beckwith returned to Longview and held a five-day teaching mission in Longview. The dream was alive and Trinity Mission grew.

A building committee, composed of Judge Richard B. Levy, Judge J.N. Campbell, and Mr. W.W. Duke was named in 1903, with the Rev. Chas B. Coerr as Missionary in Charge. Their first task was to find a suitable lot. The Texas and Pacific Railway Company had donated lots to all the other congregations when the town was laid out, but the Episcopal Church came later and had to purchase their land. Through the determination of Estelle Wright, a suitable lot was finally found on Fredonia Street.

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