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Tuesday, 22 November 2011
A look at the Huguenots


A few years ago I penned a casual blog piece that listed the religious preferences of our Founding Fathers. At the time I used a table from adherents.com as I was very impressed with their detailed section on the
Religious Affiliation of the Founding Fathers of the United States of America, which presented the faiths of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, signers of the Articles of Confederation, and Constitutional Convention delegates including signers of the U.S. Constitution. One group in particular that piqued the interest of some readers and me was the Huguenots. I was not that familiar with this ‘denomination’ as they were (and still are) truly a religious minority. That said their influence on colonial America is quite apparent.

The Huguenot Founding Fathers that were listed were: Henry Laurens, a delegate from South Carolina and signer of the Articles of Confederation; Alexander Hamilton, a delegate from New York and signer of the U.S. Constitution (Note: Hamilton was half Huguenot: He was a practicing Presbyterian and an Episcopalian, but his birth mother was a devout Huguenot); and Daniel Huger, a delegate from South Carolina and Huguenot Representative in First U.S. Federal Congress (1789-1791). No Huguenots are known to have been among the signers of the Declaration of Independence, nor did they serve in the Senate in the First Federal Congress. There were Huguenot colonial communities in what is New Platz NY, New Rochell NY, South Shore (Staten Island) NY, Central PA, Chesterfield County VA, Richmond VA, and Charleston SC. One can assume there were also active churches in South Carolina where Laurens and Huger resided and in New York, where Hamilton lived.

Most Huguenots were originally Calvinists in the Reformed Church who would be considered pseudo-Presbyterians today. Former Lutherans and Baptists also made up a sizable number of those counted as Huguenots. Many came from France’s middle-classes. The Roman Catholic Church and the French government had a long history of persecuting the Huguenots, especially in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Several outbreaks of violence against French Protestants at the instigation of the Catholic Church and the Jesuit Order killed off many within France and drove thousands of others into exile. Their adherence to the Bible as the rule of Christian faith threatened the power of the Catholic Church within France, and many French politicians feared that this would destabilize the country.

Events such as the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre forced large segments of the Huguenot population to flee, draining France of much of its middle-class, which contributed to setting the stage for the bloody French Revolution several generations later. The flight of many middle-class Huguenots to other nations like England and the American colonies helped bolster their host nations’ economies at France’s expense. Despite systematic persecution in the 1500’s and 1600’s, there still remains a tiny but significant Huguenot (Protestant) presence within France to this day, accounting for approximately 2% of the French population.

I was able to find an active U.S. Huguenot church, The French Huguenot (Protestant) Church. According to their website:

The French Protestant Church of Charleston was founded in approximately 1681 by Huguenot refugees from the Protestant persecutions in France. About 450 Huguenots had settled in South Carolina’s Low Country by 1700. The first Huguenot Church was built on its present site [Charleston S.C.] in 1687, but in 1796 was destroyed in an attempt to stop the spread of fire, which had burned a large surrounding area. The replacement for the original building was completed in 1800 and dismantled in 1844 to make way for the present Gothic Revival edifice, designed by Edward Brickell White and dedicated in 1845. The church was damaged by shellfire during the long bombardment of downtown Charleston in the War Between the States and was nearly demolished in the severe earthquake of 1886. The present building dates to 1845.

In 1845, the church also purchased and installed a tracker organ carved in the style and shape of a Gothic chapel. Its keys are connected with the pipe valves by a wooden “tracker” or mechanical linkage which responds to the organist’s touch faster than any modern mechanism allows. Its tone is similar to the Baroque organs for which Bach and Handel composed. It was built by the leading American organ builder of the first half of the 19th century, Henry Erben. After the fall of Charleston in 1865, federal soldiers dismantled the organ and were loading it on a New York-bound ship when the pleas of the organist, Mr. T. P. O’Neale, and some influential friends saved it.

This is the only remaining independent Huguenot Church in America. Our church is governed by the Board of Directors and the Board of Elders. Calvinist doctrine, as handed down by the early founders, is very much in evidence today. Our weekly worship service is conducted in English. It is a liturgical service, adapted from the liturgies of Neufchatel and Vallangin dated 1737 and 1772. Communion services are held periodically and are open to all believers. Since 1950, an annual service in French has been celebrated in the spring.

The Huguenot Society of South Carolina also has a website full of excellent resources on Huguenot history. According to their charter, HSoSC  was founded in 1885 by their descendants in order to honor and perpetuate the memory of these French Protestant men, women and children.

Source: “Representatives Elected to the United States Congress: The 1st Federal Congress of the United States of America (1789-1791)” in “Religion in the United States Government” by Daniel H., South Carolina, Huguenot Church

Huguenot Crest: The lily cross symbolises the French Huguenots and the historic connection between the Huguenots and Lisburn. The fleur-de-lis, lily, is the symbol of France. The mitre is a symbol for the cathedral that existed in Lisburn for over 300 years. The shuttle and the thread of flax are symbols for the linen industry. The ostrich head with the horseshoe on its beak are taken from the arms of Sir Richard Wallace. The gamecock on the crest is a canting reference to the old name of the town, Lisnagarvey, or the fort of gamesters. The supporters are two phoenix rising from the flames and refer to the fact that the town was burned down and rebuilt twice in its early days. The motto "I will arise out of fire" refers to the same facts.

Posted by ny5/pinstripepress at 9:20 AM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 22 November 2011 9:28 AM EST
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