Pleasant Hill Church community coming to life again Sunday

Memorial Homecoming is Sunday in one of Greene County's most historic spots

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The annual Pleasant Hill Memorial Homecoming service and potluck dinner will be held Sunday, May 26, at the 138-year-old pioneer church located about five miles southeast of Jefferson, near the intersection of R and Redwood avenues.

The annual Pleasant Hill Memorial Homecoming service and potluck dinner will be held Sunday, May 26, at the 138-year-old pioneer church located about five miles southeast of Jefferson.

The event is presented by the Pleasant Hill Memorial Inc. committee, with support from the Greene County Iowa Historical Society.

Pleasant Hill Church has roots from 1873, when Methodist classes were started to serve the pioneers settling in the area. The church structure was started in 1881, and it has been kept in more-or-less good repair ever since, even though there hasn’t been an active congregation using the church for decades.

The neighbors formed a non-profit organization to sustain it, and for 60 or 70 years a service on Memorial Day weekend has been held.

Peg Semke, president of the Pleasant Hill Memorial board, notes the old church is in a renaissance.

“We’re really grateful for all that’s happened the last two years,” Semke said. “Due to personal donations of time, money, labor and supplies, and a Louis Dreyfus Company grant from the Greene County Board of Supervisors, the interior has been patched and repainted, the windows have been replaced and some refurbished, the basement walls have been repaired, and the original wood floor is very near completion of rehab.”

She said that “going hand in hand with this, we have had increased usage of the church building, with weekly Sunday evening services last summer,” led by Central Christian Church from Jefferson. There have also been two Easter sunrise services, Christmas caroling and a funeral.

“Pleasant Hill Memorial is very grateful to be existing not only as a memorial but to once again becoming a living part of the community,” Semke said.

Activities at this year’s Homecoming next Sunday will begin at 9:30 a.m. with a revival-like service presented by Central Christian Church, and the public is welcome.

At 10 a.m. there will be coffee, juice and Marianne Carlson’s Iowa State Fair champion cinnamon rolls served in the church yard, with music by the Central Christian brass ensemble.

At 11 a.m., the official Homecoming service will begin back in the church, with congregational hymn singing, a special musical salute to veteran and service members led by Mark and Rita Rasmussen, an invocation and benediction by Rev. Dale Hanaman of the historical society and brief messages from three guest speakers:

Melissa Bosshart Frederick, 28, who now lives near the southern border of Greene County, grew up a mile north of Pleasant Hill, graduated from Jefferson-Scranton High School in 2009 and the University of Iowa in 2013. She was a candidate for the Greene County Board of Supervisors last fall. Melissa and her husband, Bill Frederick, are raising baby daughter Leah on their farm in southern Greenbrier Township.

Melissa continues her strong personal ties to Pleasant Hill Church. “My mom and dad got married there,” she said. “We’ve always been good friends with the Semkes, and they got married there. The funeral luncheon for my great-grandpa was in the church, and my husband, Bill, and I got married there. It’s always been a special place in my life.”

Rep. Phil Thompson, of Jefferson, also 28 and a Jefferson-Scranton High School classmate of Melissa Frederick, was in the U.S. Army for eight years, deployed to Iraq, attended West Point for two years and got out as a staff sergeant. He now represents his home area in the Iowa House of Representatives.

“Pleasant Hill has always been a special church for my family,” Thompson said. “We attended the Pleasant Hill Memorial service and potluck every year. As a boy, the service stood out as one of my earliest, most vivid memories. I look back on those services and remember feeling so inspired by the church choir filling up the room and the 21-gun salute. It was probably the first community tradition that I fully understood and had deep reverence for. It helped shape my character and desire to serve.”

Wallace Teagarden, 96, a native of the Pleasant Hill area who now lives in Ames, says he intends to be back for his traditional patriotic oration. “I’m really blessed in my health. I feel good, and I plan to be there as usual,” Teagarden said, then adding his annual caveat: “But at my age, you never know.”

He learned his stirring address as a junior high student in Grand Junction and has been doing it from memory ever since – including at every Pleasant Hill Homecoming since 1960. How does he do it?

“Well, I practice it when Memorial Day is coming around,” he said. “And I do my voice exercises every day all year. When you get older and are living alone, your voice can get weak. So twice a day, I count to 100 in a good loud voice. I’ve probably done that for 50 years or longer. If I don’t exercise it daily, I find it gets kind of screechy and scratchy.”

At noon Sunday, after the service, there will be a 21-gun salute outdoors by the Kinkead Martin American Legion Post of Rippey and “Taps” by Sam Bassett on trumpet.

Then there will be the traditional Pleasant Hill Homecoming chicken potluck dinner. The chicken will be provided, but all are asked to bring a favorite side dish and their tableware.
A freewill offering will be accepted to help with the costs of the celebration and the ongoing work on the church facilities.

Also, high-quality prints of an oil painting of Pleasant Hill Church, done during the Memorial Homecoming celebration in 2017 by noted Iowa artist Zack Jones, will be sold for $50 in a fundraiser for the historical society.

Following the dinner, the board members of Pleasant Hill Memorial Inc. will have their annual meeting in the church.

Chuck Offenburger is a member of the Greene County Historical Society.

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