Church: Greenwood -
Zion Church of Christ (History of Pastor - 1980)
Contact: Dolores (Mohr) Kenyon
E-mail:
dolores@wiclarkcountyhistory.org
Surnames: Hendren
----Source: Clark County Press (Neillsville, Clark Co., WI) 6/12/1980
Zion Church of Christ (History of Pastor - 1980)
Zion Church of Christ of Greenwood will soon be celebrating an anniversary.
Having purchased the present church from another denomination, the event has
brought to light events of by-gone days.
It was on October 9, 1866, when William Turner Hendren took for his bride
Lorinda Milwaukee Wright as his bride in the home of her twin sister in Mt.
Vernon, Iowa. He was a native of Ohio and a graduate of Western Teleological
Seminary in Allegheny, Pennsylvania. Together, they went to Caledonia,
Minnesota, where he was a presbyterian minister for six years.
In 1872, he was called to Neillsville where he built a brick church at the
corner of 5th and Court Streets. He served for 29 years as pastor. In a brief
history of this church it says. “No man is better known in Clark County than the
pioneer and founder of the church, Rev. Wm. T. Hendren.” It goes on to tell that
he had gone to every schoolhouse for miles around. Many are the stories of his
heroism in facing all kinds of weather to keep his appointments.
While in Neillsville, the Hendren’s adopted a daughter, Emma, and also took in
Edith McIntyre, who became Mrs. Willis Peacock. The two girls were with them
when they went to Greenwood.
The record says that at Greenwood the chapel was too small. He purchased the
land to erect a Presbyterian Church. There were only eleven families in the
church membership. He deeded his land to the Presbyterian Church for $2.00. The
following year the land was mortgaged for $600 (1892) in the name of the Synod
of Wisconsin Presbytery of La Crosse. This must have been for the construction
of the new church.
Missionary work had been the goal of Hendren, but he failed a physical exam
which would allow him to go to Africa. But that idea provided he sent his gold
watch and chain to the African post as an expression of his interest.
In Greenwood, he also purchased the one block west of the church ground for a
family home. The street on which the house was located was name for him.
Hendren was not a selfish man. He had written in his will in 1903 that $1,000 be
paid upon his wife’s death or upon the 15th birthday of Genevieve Joyce Ball,
the only daughter of the late Mrs. Emma Hendren Ball. The rest of his
possessions were to go to Lorinda, his companion and helper in life since
October 9, 1866. He did not say where this would go if Lorinda were no longer
living.
It was in May in 1910 that a new Town had been organized in Township 26 North,
Range 3 West. It had been give a name but the next day the County Board of
Supervisors voted to rename it and selected “Hendren” in honor of the Rev.
Hendren.
In appreciation, Hendren responded at the next session of the board with these
words: “I Wm. Turner Hendren, a resident, of Neillsville from 1972 to 1891 and a
resident of Greenwood from 1891 to 1910, 38 years in all, take this opportunity
to express to you my heartfelt thanks for the hour conferred upon me at your
session in May last when you chose my family name as the name of the newly
organized Town of Hendren in this county. By me, this honor was entirely
unsought and unexpected. Being born near Columbus, Ohio, I can now say that I
have spent one-half of my life as a citizen of Clark County and if during these
long years I have done anything worthy of this honor, I am pleased to have 40
good men say so in black and white. Gentlemen, I thank you one and all for your
kind remembrance.”
Hendren was no longer a young man and for some reason the Synod had not called
another pastor to replace him. The congregation was not increasing in strength
and the building was finally sold to the Zion German Reformed Church for $1,000.
Hendren continued to be active in the community. An old timer recently recalled
his pattern of helping others. In crossing the city on foot, he would pull up a
carrot here and another there. By the time he reached the home intended, he
would have a handful of carrots for the family. No one seemed to resent his
actions. Helping out others had earned him the name, “The Old Shepherd of Clark
County.” His wide-spread church activities is still in evidence among dusty
papers, like a marriage certificate at Tioga.
The Rev. Hendren died in 1920. Although he did have a lot in the Neillsville
City Cemetery he was laid to rest in Greenwood.
Lorinda Hendren lived in the house on Hendren Street until she want to live with
Mrs. Peacock. The house had been left for Barbara Jean and Mary Agnes Peacock,
but their mother, who was their special guardian, sold it to Arthus and Gertrude
Currie in 1930. Mrs. Hendren died in 1935.
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