The Experience
This brick church (14 feet from the Benjamin Franklin Bridge) and its Historical Center present a picture of Colonial life and the beginnings of American Methodism. The unadorned sanctuary, with its simple pews, original floorboards and candlesticks illuminating the balconies, looks as it did when completed in 1792.
The two-room museum has artifacts from 18th- and 19th-century life, as well as personal effects of Methodist leaders, including the bible brought from England by Francis Asbury, the “Father of American Methodists,” and the journal of Joseph Pilmoor, the first pastor of St. George’s.
History
Englishman John Wesley, an Anglican priest, founded the Methodist movement. In 1769, his followers in Philadelphia purchased this nearly constructed meeting house, which became a first stop for preachers sent from England and a center for the first annual Methodist conferences from 1773 through 1775.
In 1784, the Society of Methodists became the Methodist Episcopal Church, the precursor to today’s United Methodism. In 1789, the first Methodist Book Room opened here, leading to the Methodist Publishing House and the contemporary Cokesbury Book Stores.