- Unitarian Universalist churches in Tuscaloosa, AL
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- Unitarian Universalist churches in United States
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Who we are
Welcome to the Unitarian Universalist Congregation, the home of liberal religion in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. We are a community of faith that honors diversity in religious thought and practice.
We hope that you'll find the information that you need here and that you'll visit us for a Sunday service or a social event.
Our Mission
INVITE all into a welcoming community;
INSPIRE a free and responsible spiritual journey;
INVOLVE all in building a just and compassionate world.
We hope that you'll find the information that you need here and that you'll visit us for a Sunday service or a social event.
Our Mission
INVITE all into a welcoming community;
INSPIRE a free and responsible spiritual journey;
INVOLVE all in building a just and compassionate world.
Street Address
6400 New Watermelon Rd
Tuscaloosa,
AL
35406-2912
United States
Phone: (205) 758-8729
Download UU Congregation of Tuscaloosa vCard with Service Times
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Church Pastor
Rev. Ruth Vann Lillian
Minister
6400 New Watermelon Rd
Tuscaloosa,
AL
35406-2912
United States
Phone: (205) 758-8729
Download Minister Rev. Ruth Vann Lillian vCard
Click here to contact Rev. Ruth Vann Lillian
Denomination
Unitarian Universalist
Affiliations
Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA)
Church Website
UU Congregation of Tuscaloosa on Social Media
YouTube Video: There is Beauty in Our Scars | Sunday, May 29, 2022 | UUTuscaloosa
Leadership
Leader Name:
Rev. Ruth Vann Lillian
Leader Position:
Minister
Formal Title:
Leader Address:
Phone:
Fax:
Leader Email:
Click here to contact Rev. Ruth Vann Lillian
Leader Bio:
Rev. Ruth Vann Lillian on Social Media:
Other Church Leaders:
Leadership Photos
Administration
Admin Name:
Admin Position:
Admin Address:
Phone:
Fax:
Admin Email:
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Mailing Address
Driving Directions
Travel/Direction Tips
The Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Tuscaloosa is located at 6400 New Watermelon Road, about 1 mile beyond the Lake Tuscaloosa Dam.
Parking
Please share parking information and/or parking experience!
UU Congregation of Tuscaloosa Service Times
We have Meditation at 9:00 and Traditional Worship at 10:30 every Sunday. as well as special services on other occasions.
It's been more than 2 years since the last service times update. Please make sure to contact the church to confirm service times.
Please contact the church to confirm Service Times or SUBSCRIBE to updates below
It's been more than 2 years since the last service times update. Please make sure to contact the church to confirm service times.
Please contact the church to confirm Service Times or SUBSCRIBE to updates below
Worship Languages
Dress Code
Sunday School / Children and Youth Activities
Under 12s:
Under 18s:
Local outreach & community activities
Other activities & ministries
Special Needs/Accessibility
The building is accessible to people of all ages, abilities, and mobilities.
Prayers and Hymns
Main Bible:
Hymns and Songs:
Other information
Average Adult Congregation:
Average Youth Congregation:
Additional Info:
UU Congregation of Church Tuscaloosa Photos
UU Congregation of Tuscaloosa History
The congregation was founded in 1954 as the Unitarian Fellowship of Tuscaloosa, during troubled times in the country and Alabama. It immediately found itself in the midst of the civil rights movement.
In 1956 two African American women were admitted to the University of Alabama. They were not allowed to live on campus but invited to attend classes. Only one of the students, Autherine Lucy, enrolled in classes. The fellowship’s president, George W. DeSchweintz, invited Ms. Lucy to attend services as a show of support in the face of racial prejudice. She did attend and the service proceeded without incident. However this event made the newspapers and caused quite a stir in town.
In the days following Ms. Lucy’s admission riots broke out on campus and throughout the city. Members of the Ku Klux Klan roamed the campus in red hoods and carrying baseball bats the day after the service. The KKK burned crosses on the University President’s yard and threatened bomb scares. At one point the car in which Miss Lucy was riding was surrounded by a mob, and she barely managed to escape with her life.These riots led the University to suspend her from the school for her own safety.
The Fellowship was divided on her attendance at the fellowship and at the university. Some members pushed for a petition to reinstate her at the school. The petition failed. Membership and attendance dropped drastically and continued to drop for the next several years.
In the early 1960s the fellowship discussed disbanding, but during the mid to late-60s membership began to grow again, particularly following Governor Wallace’s “stand in the schoolhouse door,” and the successful integration of the University of Alabama. During this time there was heated discussion about the freedom riders coming to Alabama to register Black voters. Should members of the church offer them home hospitality? There was concern for the safety of members’ homes. Longtime member Gene Byrd believes some members did offer home hospitality but does not recall who those members might have been.
In March 1965 Unitarian minister James Reeb was killed after he and hundreds of other ministers responded to a call from Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King to join in a voter registration march in Selma, Alabama. Members from this congregation participated in the voter registration march and attended the memorial service in Selma.
In the 1970s, member Betty Mego at the request of the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee began advocating for the fellowship, now the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, to affiliate with the Southern Student Project. This project was a student exchange program where Black students from Tuscaloosa would go to State College, Pennsylvania to attend school. This project met harsh resistance by the fellowship. She writes in a letter dated May 1970 to Antoinette Holl of State College, “There is not the slightest doubt in my mind that this (the $100) represents ‘a generous contribution and all that is really necessary’ in the minds of several members of our UUA group. Strange revelations have been surfacing.” The fellowship refused to affiliate officially.
During this time, Rev. Carl Bretz arrived to work at Bryce Hospital. He served as president of the board and with his leadership strengthened the fellowship and it began to grow once again. The congregation brought in Rev. AJ Matill as its first part time minister in 1979. During his tenure began one of our longest running traditions, the annual Halloween picnic at Moundville which continues today. When Rev. Matill moved on, Rev. Bretz served as part time minister until 1989. One of his outreach activities, Meals on Wheels, continues to this day,
The fellowship met in a variety of rented locations. The longest residence was at the Hillel Center on the UA campus, but they also met at the YMCA and briefly at the Masonic Lodge, before purchasing the current property on New Watermelon Road and building the church, which opened in January 1992.
The congregation was served by a series of part time ministers: Revs. Michael Seider, Joan Armstrong, Barbara Jamestone, Chris Brownlee, Jeff Jones, and Jennifer Innis. Rev. Innis served as the congregation’s first full time interim minister. In 2001 the congregation called the Rev. Michael Thompson as its first full time settled minister. During this time the organization voted to change its name to the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Tuscaloosa.
In 2006, following a series of arsons of Black churches in rural west Alabama, many persons throughout the country mobilized to support and rebuild the burned churches. The Congregation supported this outreach by providing transportation and home hospitality.
In 2008, Rev. Fred L Hammond came on as a consulting minister on a part time basis. The congregation began to grow again. In April of 2011 an E-4 tornado ripped through Tuscaloosa. Seven member families lost homes in the tornado. The UU Trauma Response Ministry team came to assist the congregation in recovery. Congregations across the nation sent cards and financial support to assist our families.
Also that year, Rev. Hammond was arrested at the state capitol in protest of HB 56, Alabama’s anti-immigrant law. In 2012, the congregation provided home hospitality and meeting space to the Undocubus, a mobile immigrant education program.
In 2013, the congregation called Rev. Hammond as its full time settled minister. He served until 2018 and was succeeded by Rev. Ruth Vann Lillian, our current minister.
In recent years the Congregation has continued its focus on social justice initiatives. The Congregation contributes one half of its offering plate each Sunday to a worthy nonprofit organization. It has provided financial and/or logistical support to several nascent organizations, including Move To Amend, Druid City Pride, The Peoples Loan Project, and others. We continue a now thirty-year commitment to Meals on Wheels.
In 1956 two African American women were admitted to the University of Alabama. They were not allowed to live on campus but invited to attend classes. Only one of the students, Autherine Lucy, enrolled in classes. The fellowship’s president, George W. DeSchweintz, invited Ms. Lucy to attend services as a show of support in the face of racial prejudice. She did attend and the service proceeded without incident. However this event made the newspapers and caused quite a stir in town.
The Fellowship was divided on her attendance at the fellowship and at the university. Some members pushed for a petition to reinstate her at the school. The petition failed. Membership and attendance dropped drastically and continued to drop for the next several years.
In the early 1960s the fellowship discussed disbanding, but during the mid to late-60s membership began to grow again, particularly following Governor Wallace’s “stand in the schoolhouse door,” and the successful integration of the University of Alabama. During this time there was heated discussion about the freedom riders coming to Alabama to register Black voters. Should members of the church offer them home hospitality? There was concern for the safety of members’ homes. Longtime member Gene Byrd believes some members did offer home hospitality but does not recall who those members might have been.
In the 1970s, member Betty Mego at the request of the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee began advocating for the fellowship, now the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, to affiliate with the Southern Student Project. This project was a student exchange program where Black students from Tuscaloosa would go to State College, Pennsylvania to attend school. This project met harsh resistance by the fellowship. She writes in a letter dated May 1970 to Antoinette Holl of State College, “There is not the slightest doubt in my mind that this (the $100) represents ‘a generous contribution and all that is really necessary’ in the minds of several members of our UUA group. Strange revelations have been surfacing.” The fellowship refused to affiliate officially.
During this time, Rev. Carl Bretz arrived to work at Bryce Hospital. He served as president of the board and with his leadership strengthened the fellowship and it began to grow once again. The congregation brought in Rev. AJ Matill as its first part time minister in 1979. During his tenure began one of our longest running traditions, the annual Halloween picnic at Moundville which continues today. When Rev. Matill moved on, Rev. Bretz served as part time minister until 1989. One of his outreach activities, Meals on Wheels, continues to this day,
The congregation was served by a series of part time ministers: Revs. Michael Seider, Joan Armstrong, Barbara Jamestone, Chris Brownlee, Jeff Jones, and Jennifer Innis. Rev. Innis served as the congregation’s first full time interim minister. In 2001 the congregation called the Rev. Michael Thompson as its first full time settled minister. During this time the organization voted to change its name to the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Tuscaloosa.
In 2006, following a series of arsons of Black churches in rural west Alabama, many persons throughout the country mobilized to support and rebuild the burned churches. The Congregation supported this outreach by providing transportation and home hospitality.
In 2008, Rev. Fred L Hammond came on as a consulting minister on a part time basis. The congregation began to grow again. In April of 2011 an E-4 tornado ripped through Tuscaloosa. Seven member families lost homes in the tornado. The UU Trauma Response Ministry team came to assist the congregation in recovery. Congregations across the nation sent cards and financial support to assist our families.
In 2013, the congregation called Rev. Hammond as its full time settled minister. He served until 2018 and was succeeded by Rev. Ruth Vann Lillian, our current minister.
In recent years the Congregation has continued its focus on social justice initiatives. The Congregation contributes one half of its offering plate each Sunday to a worthy nonprofit organization. It has provided financial and/or logistical support to several nascent organizations, including Move To Amend, Druid City Pride, The Peoples Loan Project, and others. We continue a now thirty-year commitment to Meals on Wheels.
UU Congregation of Tuscaloosa Historical Photos
UU Congregation of Tuscaloosa listing was last updated on the 3rd of June, 2022