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History Years
of the Ohio District Council Campground
By Bishop Francis L. Smith
Early
records of the Ohio District Council as an organization shows
it’s origin being October 7, 1925; and it was organized
under the Ohio General Not-For-Profit Corporation Acts. However,
the Ohio District Council Campground did not start out to be a
campground. The late Bishop Fred Clark, who was the Diocesan of
the state of Ohio, was a tenderhearted man who hated the idea
of the aged saints being sent to what was then known as “Old
Folks Homes.” In most parts of the state these institutions
provided terrible accommodations, odors, and treatment of the
clients. This prompted Bishop Clark to wage a campaign to find
a place to establish a rest home for the saints where they would
be treated with more love and respect. He also envisioned a place
where they could practice their form of worship without interference.
In
1938 the Ohio District Council, through Bishop Clark, purchased
a farm at Green, Ohio, which is north of Warren, Ohio. There was
a stately farmhouse and other structures on the property and plenty
of space for gardening to raise food for the home. However, the
remoteness of the location did not lean itself to attracting the
aged saints or their families to the site.
In
1944 Bishop Arthur William Lewis, who pastored in Cleveland, Ohio,
while traveling along state route 40 came across the Washington
Heights Motor Hotel formerly known as the Wick hotel. It was an
older facility located three miles east of the city of Zanesville,
Ohio, and it was for sale! Bishop Lewis told Bishop Fred Clark
about the property, which in turn called District Elder Ralph
Bass of Dayton, Ohio and Bishop Karl F. Smith of Columbus, Ohio
to go with him to look at the property.
It
turned out that the property had been repossessed and was being
held by a bank. They wanted to sell the property for nineteen-thousand
dollars, the outstanding amount on the original mortgage. The
two-story motel was complete with a kitchen, dining room, twenty-three
lodging rooms and it sat on a tract of land bordering the U.S.
40 National Highway. The one hundred forty seven acre tract of
land had its own water supply and a flowing natural gas well.
There were also detached garages for travelers’ cars. Toward
the rear of the property was a barn left from the days when it
had been a farm.
The
brethren were so impressed with the possibility of having a rest
home in such a convenient location that they chipped in their
personal funds to raise one thousand dollars on the spot to give
the bank as earnest money. The bank took the property off the
market and gave the Ohio District Council one year to raise the
balance. The banker later confessed that he did not think they
could produce the necessary funds and expected to pocket their
earnest money as profit.
Bishop
Clark turned the task of raising the money over to a sister in
his church by the name of Ida Metcalf. Her plans were simple.
She visited all of the Ohio District Council churches and requested
that each member set aside ten cents a week to be turned in at
each Council session. This plan was executed with such success
that at the end of eleven months, approximately July 1944, one
month early, the men walked into the bank and laid down eighteen
thousand dollars ($18.000) and took possession of the property;
to the amazement of the banker.
The
property in Green, Ohio was disposed of and the few saints were
transferred to the new location in Zanesville. A sister from Bishop
Clark’s church in Warren, Ohio, whose name has been lost
to time, was the matron of the new home.
In
1947 Elder and Sister Jarvis moved to Zanesville from Oberlin,
Ohio and became the managers of the property. Elder Jarvis erected
a small house near the barn that he and his family occupied for
several years.
In
1955, after talking about it for some time, it was decided to
start a campground. With the assistance of men from various parts
of the state a one-story frame Tabernacle with a flat roof and
dirt floor covered with gravel was erected. The July session of
the Ohio District Council was held there with members staying
in some of the cheaper motels and in homes of the saints. Meals
were served in the Rest Home dining room; some of the auxiliary
meetings were held there; and for several years the Pastors' meeting
was held under a large oak tree near the east end of the Rest
Home.
In
1958 a metal pole building was erected beside the Tabernacle and
equipped to serve as a dining room. At the rear end of the pole
building there was a division equipped with wash basins, shower
stalls and toilet stools.
Council
attendance had flourished, and after the July session was over
there were two weeks of camping for young people and children.
Many youth were introduced to salvation during those council sessions;
and the numbers grew so that it became necessary to think about
expansion.
It
was decided to add a second story to the Tabernacle building for
lodging. Elder Royal Haines drew up plans; and the men of the
state were again called upon to build. By that time the State
of Ohio had instituted an inspection department that regulated
buildings in rural areas, and consequently an inspector saw us
at work and stopped us because his department had not approved
our plans. We were told that the frame structure was oversized
and therefore we would not be allowed to put in any sort of heating
plant. Elder Haines and Elder Francis L. Smith (Late Bishop Francis
Smith) were commissioned to go to Columbus and get the necessary
approval and permits; and after considerable frustration we finally
were allowed to complete the building with some modification.
The
Council sessions continued to enlarge, and after several years
of putting up with bugs, moths, mosquitoes and other invaders
it was decided to build another Tabernacle to seat six hundred;
east of the old Tabernacle. This was done in 1963-64. The next
addition was a large metal dormitory building that housed approximately
two hundred people on cots. This building was equipped with bathrooms
and air-conditioning.
When
the first Tabernacle was built, a section of ground was laid out
for the erection of cottages. The lots were leased to individuals;
but the cottages were available for ownership. Elder and Sister
Haines built a cottage on the property, as did Bishop Karl F.
Smith, Bishop Ralph Bass and Elder Harvey Bland of Warren. Those
properties could be left to relatives or sold back to the Ohio
District Council. When a nurse was hired to be over the Nursing
Home, part of the agreement was to build her a cottage. When the
time came that she was no longer able to serve, the cottage was
converted to an administration office.
In
1963 a twenty-five-bed facility was added to the Rest Home; which
changed its status to an Intermediate Care Nursing Home.
In
1973, under the leadership of Chairman Bishop Bowers, plans were
made to build a new Nursing Home around the older buildings. A
loan was received from the Federal Farm and Home Administration
for 1.8 million dollars to remodel and build a first class Skilled
Care Nursing Home. That facility provided one hundred beds, therapy
rooms, a chapel, nursing stations, and all of the amenities that
go with such a structure. The Ohio District Council sold approximately
seven acres to the Ohio District Council Nursing Home, Inc.; a
separate corporation wholly owned by the Ohio District Council
of Pentecostal Churches, Inc.
The Nursing Home has been a great blessing to the Ohio District
Council and its membership, and to the community of Zanesville.
Many souls have been saved by being brought under the influence
of the gospel in Chapel services and private counseling. Brother
and Sister John Tate remodeled and lived in the old farmhouse
at the rear of the Nursing Home and Sister Tate canned many types
of food from her garden to help feed the members of the home.
Contributions from the Nursing Home to the Ohio District Council
have helped with the expansion of the campground’s buildings
and infrastructure. The Nursing Home, which maintains a very high
occupancy rate, continues to enjoy great favor and success as
a business.
In
the late 1970’s the Ohio District Council decided to erect
a new Tabernacle. The site that was chosen was elevated high above
all of the other buildings. A loan was obtained and the twelve-hundred
seat auditorium with a one-hundred seat side room, restrooms and
foyer was erected. That structure is heated and air-conditioned
so that it can be used in any season. The July sessions of the
Ohio District Council are held at the campground; and in later
months hundreds of youth attend the camp from as far away as Chicago,
Illinois. What joyful times have been had on these grounds as
souls were saved, reclaimed, revived and inspired.
In
the 1980’s the Ohio District Council erected a four-hundred
seat cafeteria fully equipped and air-conditioned.
Previous
administrators of the Nursing Home were Elder Royal Haines and
District Elder Frank McDonald; Elder Nathan McDonald is the current
administrator. Previous administrators of the campground were
Elder Royal Haines, Elder James Gregory, and Elder James Gaiters;
Brother James McDonald is the current administrator. Some of the
memorable names that have been associated with the Nursing Home
and the Campground are as follows: Bishop and Sister Fred Clark,
Sister Metcalf, Bishop Ralph Bass, Bishop Karl F. Smith, Sister
Spellman, Sister Carolyn Andrews, Elder and Sister Jarvis, and
designated members that were under the pastorates of District
Elder Frank McDonald and Elder James Gaiters. Other memorable
names were District Elder and Sister Charles Reid, Sister Mary
Patterson, Brother Hubert Carney of Steubenville, Ohio, Bishop
Chester R. Lee, and Brother Mitchell.
Elder
Charles Reid served as President of the State Brotherhood for
many years. During his reign he would faithfully martial the men
together to clean the grounds, pave walkways, and prepare the
grounds for shutdown in the fall. District Elder Charles Reid
passed the mantel of leadership to Elder Vernon Williams who lead
the men for a number of years. The mantel was then passed to Elder
Howard Collier, and during his reign the steps were added to the
front of the Tabernacle. Brother Lloyd Stewart was credited with
doing most of the concrete work on the grounds. Throughout the
years the State Brotherhood has played a major role in the beautification
of the campground. Various auxiliaries throughout the state raised
money for different projects: first for the Ohio District Council
Nursing Home, and later for the Ohio District Council Campground.
Although
the Ohio District Council didn't have an auspicious beginning,
it is apparent that the Lord’s favor has been upon His children:
for today the Ohio District Council Campground along with the
Ohio District Council Nursing Home is worth more than six-million
dollars.
The
State of Ohio routed Interstate 70 through our land severing seventy-four
acres to the north from the remaining forty-one acres of the campsite.
The land that is located north of I-70 has been a valuable resource;
providing strip-mining and timber to sell. At present its gas
wells are providing mineral rights royalties to the Ohio District
Council. With the help of the Lord the day will come when the
great Ohio District Council will expand the camp facilities to
some of that land as well.
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