Saint Mary's Church, Middlesboro

a eucharistic community of the Episcopal Diocese of Lexington

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Our History

National Register of Historic Places marker
St. Mary's is on the National Register of Historic Places
On June 23, 1889, Bishop Dudley of Kentucky met with Bishop Pennick of Tennessee and held a worship service for Anglicans and Episcopalians at the Colgan Print Shop in Middlesboro, Kentucky.  Mr. Fred Fisher was appointed lay reader in charge and, on August 10, 1889, Father Ringgold of St. John’s, Knoxville, Tennessee, celebrated communion with the faithful in the lobby of the Middlesboro Hotel.  On the 17th of August, the Rev. H. H. Sneed was sent to Middlesboro by Bishop Dudley and services were held at the Baptist Church.  On the following Monday, planning was begun to organize a mission to be known as St. Mary’s.

Money was subscribed for the support of the mission and construction of a church building.  The Town & Lands Company gave the lot on Edgewood Road, where the church is presently located, to the congregation for building purposes, with the church to be built thereon, costing approximately $2,000.

On the 3rd of August 1890, Rev. Sneed instituted St. Mary’s Mission and nearly 100 adult communicants were enrolled.  A three-room cottage on the lot was moved to the Lothbury side, and five additional rooms were added.  This created the rectory.  Formal dedication of the church took place on February 11, 1891.

Our church building is listed on the Kentucky and National Registers of historic places and is considered one of the finest examples of carpenter Gothic architecture in America.  The handsome structure, with its beautiful stained glass windows and imposing steeple, is one of the most photographed churches in the country.

The Church was tastefully furnished with gifts of thanksgiving and remembrance.  In 1917, six members of the congregation purchased a pipe organ, which is still maintained and used.

By the end of 1890, the boom had become bust in Middlesboro, in that the iron deposits, meteoric in origin, were too small and too scattered to be economically mined.  It could not supply a major steel town like Pittsburgh or Birmingham, and the more than $30,000,000 invested in the development costs were not going to be repaid.  Barets Brothers Bank in London, the project underwriter, collapsed, and in Middlesboro, bankruptcy and receivership became growth industries.

St. Mary’s Mission continued to function, however, and by October of 1891, the indebtedness for the building had been paid.  She was consecrated as a full parish church.

With the economic difficulties in Middlesboro, and the return to England of many of the communicants, in 1905, the Church retained only 21 members.

If the prospects for a major and industrial community built on steel had collapsed, coal remained, and for the next nearly 100 years, it would be the engine that drove the local economy.  St. Mary’s ministered to the faithful with missions in Pineville, Kentucky, the Bell County seat, and at Fork Ridge, Tennessee.  Services were held in outlying communities such as Cardinal, Kentucky, and the Church conducted a sewing school from 1905 until World War Il, working with mountain girls and boys, teaching them how to sew and preparing them for employment in the garment industry.  Throughout its history, St. Mary’s has tried to carry out The Great Commission, spreading the gospel to all who would hear, and be a house of prayer for all people.

In the last 10 years, the community has stabilized, the Church has been repainted, the windows rebuilt, the organ has been refurbished, and the church is on sound financial footing.  Also, St. Mary’s has become one of the leaders in the area of public affairs and in the Christian community.


Former clergy of the parish

  1. The Rev'd H. H. Sneed
  2. The Rev'd A. B. Chinn
  3. The Rev'd William C. Sheppard
  4. The Rev'd Miles B. Cooke
  5. The Rev'd R. E. Abraham
  6. The Rev'd Henry P. Manning
  7. The Rev'd James Williams
  8. The Rev'd Thomas C. Settle
  9. The Rev'd R. D. Baldwin
  10. The Rev'd Arthur R. Price
  11. The Rev'd E. J. Saywell
  12. The Rev'd Claudius F. Smith
  13. The Ven. Gerald H. Catlin
  14. The Rev'd E. R. Nöel
  15. The Rev'd Sidney E. Heath
  16. The Rev'd John S. Piper
  17. The Rev'd Robert W. Estill
  18. The Rev'd F. W. Kephart, Jr. 
  19. The Rev'd John R. Trout
  20. The Rev'd William R. Ralston
  21. The Rev'd Curtis T. Allen
  22. The Rev'd Charles G. Leavell
  23. The Rev'd Robert Clinton Cross III
  24. The Rev'd Henry C. Mayer
  25. The Rev'd Bill E. Burks
St. Mary's Episcopal Church
A parish community of the Episcopal Diocese of Lexington
131 Edgewood Road, PO Box 744, Middlesboro, Ky 40965
office: 606-248-6450. Contact us.
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