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College Presbyterian Church
Hampden-Sydney
VA
23943
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Who we are
We are a diverse group of individual believers from the Hampden-Sydney College campus as well as from Farmville and the surrounding communities. We encourage you to join us for worship. You do not have to be affiliated with the College to attend; our congregation includes people from all over the area. Know that you would be warmly welcomed into the fellowship. You may even wish to involve yourself in the work and ministry of College Church.
The mission of College Church is “Faithfully serving our neighbors through God’s love.” Our core values are care, thankfulness, open-mindedness, learning, and tradition.
The long history of College Church gives evidence to the providential and sustaining hand of God. Humbly, we continue to trust God’s guidance for our future. Prayerfully, we seek to discern God’s will for our future. Faithfully, we strive to be an asset to God’s ministry in this particular place and to bring God glory.
The mission of College Church is “Faithfully serving our neighbors through God’s love.” Our core values are care, thankfulness, open-mindedness, learning, and tradition.
The long history of College Church gives evidence to the providential and sustaining hand of God. Humbly, we continue to trust God’s guidance for our future. Prayerfully, we seek to discern God’s will for our future. Faithfully, we strive to be an asset to God’s ministry in this particular place and to bring God glory.
Street Address
418 College Rd
Hampden-Sydney,
VA
23943
United States
Phone: 434-223-8625
Download College Presbyterian Church vCard with Service Times
Church Pastor
Rev. Keith Leach
Pastor
418 College Rd
Hampden-Sydney,
VA
23943
United States
Phone: 434-223-8625
Download Pastor Rev. Keith Leach vCard with Bio
Quote of the Day
Psalms 5:11
But let all those that put their trust in thee rejoice: let them ever shout for joy, because thou defendest them: let them also that love thy name be joyful in thee.
But let all those that put their trust in thee rejoice: let them ever shout for joy, because thou defendest them: let them also that love thy name be joyful in thee.
Denomination
Presbyterian Church
Presbyterian Churches in Hampden-Sydney, Virginia, United States
Presbyterian Churches in Virginia, United States
Presbyterian Churches in United States
All churches in Hampden-Sydney, VA
Affiliations:
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Website:
Social Media
Leadership
Leader Name:
Rev. Keith Leach
Leader Position:
Pastor
Formal Title:
Leader Address:
Tel:
Fax:
Leader Email:
Leader Bio:
Rev. Keith Leach is our teaching elder and also serves as Chaplain for Hampden-Sydney College. Keith is the son of a Presbyterian minister and is a Hampden-Sydney alumnus. He was born in Farmville, baptized in College Church, and then lived in several places before graduating from high school in Forest City, North Carolina.
Keith graduated from Hampden-Sydney College with a B.A. in History in 1981. While at Hampden-Sydney, Keith was involved in a number of college activities. He played football for four years under Coach Stokeley Fulton. He was member of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, serving as treasurer, and was on the Inter-Fraternity Council. He participated with the Rugby Club and worked in the Career Counseling Office.
After graduation Keith attended the College of William & Mary School of Business Administration, earning his M.B.A. in 1986. Keith’s business career took him to various places and employers for the next 24 years, but the majority of his work was in the field of construction. From 1994 until late 2010 Keith worked for a commercial construction firm in Tallahassee, Florida. While in Tallahassee, Keith served as a lay Pastor in a Presbyterian retirement community from May of 2002 until September of 2011.
A lifelong Presbyterian, Keith became a member of the first “distance” cohort at the University of Dubuque Theological Seminary in 2007 and graduated with a Masters in Divinity in 2012. As part of his Clinical Pastoral Education, he served as a Trauma Chaplain at Tallahassee Memorial hospital. This program allowed Keith to fulfill both his call to minister to a particular congregation and prepare himself for ordination as a Teaching Elder. He was ordained as a Teaching Elder/Minister of Word and Sacrament in May of 2012 and installed to the First Presbyterian Church of Cambridge, Ohio.
In 2016, Keith was called to serve as pastor of College Church. Keith is married to Janis and is the father of two boys and one daughter-in-law.
Keith graduated from Hampden-Sydney College with a B.A. in History in 1981. While at Hampden-Sydney, Keith was involved in a number of college activities. He played football for four years under Coach Stokeley Fulton. He was member of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, serving as treasurer, and was on the Inter-Fraternity Council. He participated with the Rugby Club and worked in the Career Counseling Office.
After graduation Keith attended the College of William & Mary School of Business Administration, earning his M.B.A. in 1986. Keith’s business career took him to various places and employers for the next 24 years, but the majority of his work was in the field of construction. From 1994 until late 2010 Keith worked for a commercial construction firm in Tallahassee, Florida. While in Tallahassee, Keith served as a lay Pastor in a Presbyterian retirement community from May of 2002 until September of 2011.
A lifelong Presbyterian, Keith became a member of the first “distance” cohort at the University of Dubuque Theological Seminary in 2007 and graduated with a Masters in Divinity in 2012. As part of his Clinical Pastoral Education, he served as a Trauma Chaplain at Tallahassee Memorial hospital. This program allowed Keith to fulfill both his call to minister to a particular congregation and prepare himself for ordination as a Teaching Elder. He was ordained as a Teaching Elder/Minister of Word and Sacrament in May of 2012 and installed to the First Presbyterian Church of Cambridge, Ohio.
In 2016, Keith was called to serve as pastor of College Church. Keith is married to Janis and is the father of two boys and one daughter-in-law.
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College Presbyterian Church Leadership Photos
Administration
Admin Name:
Shanna Agee
Admin Position:
Secretary
Admin Address:
Telephone:
Fax:
Admin Email:
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 13
418 College Road
Hampden-Sydney, VA
23943
418 College Road
Hampden-Sydney, VA
23943
Driving Directions to College Presbyterian Church
Travel/Directions Tips
College Church is on College Road, the main route through the campus of Hampden-Sydney College. Follow signs to Hampden-Sydney via U.S. 460 and U.S. 15 South. Once you pass through the College’s brick gates, College Church is ¼ mile on the left.
Parking
The main entrance to the Church faces College Road and includes a ramp for handicapped access. You may park beside the Church on Atkinson Avenue, or in a lot accessed from behind the Church. If you park behind the church, you will enter the foyer of the addition, from which you can take the stairs or use the elevator to the sanctuary.
College Presbyterian Church Hampden-Sydney Service Times
Sunday
We meet at 11:00 a.m. on Sundays for worship. Communion is served on the first Sunday of the month and is open to all who believe in the saving grace of Jesus Christ.
Adult Sunday School meets at 10:00 a.m. upstairs in the Thomson Classroom Building during the school year.
Service Times last updated on the 13th of January, 2024
We meet at 11:00 a.m. on Sundays for worship. Communion is served on the first Sunday of the month and is open to all who believe in the saving grace of Jesus Christ.
Adult Sunday School meets at 10:00 a.m. upstairs in the Thomson Classroom Building during the school year.
Service Times last updated on the 13th of January, 2024
Worship Languages
Dress code:
Children and Youth Activities
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Under 18s:
Local outreach & community activities:
Our mission statement, “Faithfully Serving Our Neighbors Through God’s Love”, declares our commitment to respond to God’s faithfulness by helping others. College Church has a long history of meeting the needs of others both in our campus communities and in our local and international communities.
Today we proudly support many organizations and people through:
Presbyterian Disaster Relief funds
Farmville Area Community Emergency Services (F.A.C.E.S.)
Habitat for Humanity
Two Cents-a-Meal offerings
Operation Christmas Child
College chaplaincy
Nursing home visits
Today we proudly support many organizations and people through:
Presbyterian Disaster Relief funds
Farmville Area Community Emergency Services (F.A.C.E.S.)
Habitat for Humanity
Two Cents-a-Meal offerings
Operation Christmas Child
College chaplaincy
Nursing home visits
Other activities & ministries
Special Needs/Accessibility:
Prayers and hymns:
Main Bible:
Hymns and Songs:
Other information:
Average Adult Congregation:
Average Youth Congregation:
Additional Info:
College Presbyterian Church Photo Gallery
College Presbyterian Church History
While officially organized in 1835, College Church has represented a continuing Presbyterian presence in the community for over two centuries, as far back as 1775. The current Greek Revival building was constructed in 1860-61 by architect Robert Lewis Dabney, with a modern addition constructed in 2001-2002.
Almost immediately after the Hampden-Sydney College classes began on November 10, 1775, the Cumberland Presbyterian Church that was nearly a dozen miles away established an outpost preaching site in the college’s original classroom building. The Cumberland church officers also encouraged other nearby Prince Edward residents to attend these Sunday afternoon worship services, also urging those families to bring their slaves to these same religious services. Indeed, although these services were primarily intended as an evangelistic and pastoral outreach to the nearly one hundred original college enrollees, this open invitation fixed the fact that during the nearly two and a half centuries since then there has always been a noteworthy rural component in the College Church congregation. Another major membership group during the first century of this congregation’s history came from the residents of the Prince Edward Court House village (present-day Worsham), prior to the transfer of this county seat into Farmville in 1872.
After a three-year post-graduate Presbyterian seminary was founded 1/8 of a mile south of the college in the 1820s, the congregation purchased approximately four acres half-way between these two academic institutions in order to provide regular worship and pastoral care for the students and faculty from both schools. At this period there was no expansive open campus for either of these schools that essentially “sat out there in the isolated woods.” Therefore, a natural place for students to gather each Sunday — often to have social exchanges with the numerous faculty and farmers’ daughters — was at this little country church. In fact, for years prior to there being student-owned automobiles, many “church-related courtships” for both college and seminary students and local young women blossomed into successful 19th century marriages.
The present Greek Revival building was constructed in 1860-61. Its architect was Robert Lewis Dabney, a seminary theology professor; its local contractor was Richard Thackston (a nearby resident who had descendants in this church well into the 20th century); the hand-made bricks were formed from local clay and baked on site by black slaves and freedmen. In 1919 a church manse for the resident pastor was built on College Road immediately north of the church, and nearly a century later that brick house still serves as the pastor’s residence. A modestly functional church basement was excavated in 1955, and an educational building (with adequate kitchen and fellowship hall), was added in 2001-2002.
It has been nearly a century since the college has had its own separate religious chapel, but the congregation’s building often functions unofficially in that capacity. Baccalaureate and Commencement services were regularly held there until the mid-20th century. Interestingly, as the college’s open campus continued to expand, all of the congregation’s four acres with church, manse, and cemetery space may appear to be college property, although they are not; instead, they form a separate real estate “doughnut hole” in an otherwise continuous campus.
Since the early 1950s the pastor of the congregation (that now includes residents from Hampden-Sydney and the surrounding rural area, as well as people from both Farmville and Longwood University) has been defined as a half-time position, with the other half of that person’s duties being assigned as that of “the college chaplain” (a pastor as needed for the entire faculty, administration, trustees, more than a thousand students, and dozens of other college employees. The church and the college share that person’s salary.
When the educational building was completed in 2002, the congregation approved a forty-year legal agreement with the college that classroom space in this building could be used by the college for weekday instructional purposes, with the college’s assumption of an appropriate share of its physical maintenance.
Burial spaces in the church cemetery, however, are not available for the general public, being limited only for those in the congregation. This part of the church property, along with its perpetual care endowment, is administered by a separate Church Cemetery Committee.
The Rev. Dr. William E. Thompson
Pastor Emeritus, College Presbyterian Church and Retired Chaplain, Hampden-Sydney College
For further historical information, see Dr. Thompson’s Her Walls Before Thee Stand: The 235 Year History of the Presbyterian Congregation at Hampden-Sydney, Virginia (2010) available at the Hampden-Sydney College book store and Bortz Library and the Greenwood Library on the campus of Longwood University.
Almost immediately after the Hampden-Sydney College classes began on November 10, 1775, the Cumberland Presbyterian Church that was nearly a dozen miles away established an outpost preaching site in the college’s original classroom building. The Cumberland church officers also encouraged other nearby Prince Edward residents to attend these Sunday afternoon worship services, also urging those families to bring their slaves to these same religious services. Indeed, although these services were primarily intended as an evangelistic and pastoral outreach to the nearly one hundred original college enrollees, this open invitation fixed the fact that during the nearly two and a half centuries since then there has always been a noteworthy rural component in the College Church congregation. Another major membership group during the first century of this congregation’s history came from the residents of the Prince Edward Court House village (present-day Worsham), prior to the transfer of this county seat into Farmville in 1872.
After a three-year post-graduate Presbyterian seminary was founded 1/8 of a mile south of the college in the 1820s, the congregation purchased approximately four acres half-way between these two academic institutions in order to provide regular worship and pastoral care for the students and faculty from both schools. At this period there was no expansive open campus for either of these schools that essentially “sat out there in the isolated woods.” Therefore, a natural place for students to gather each Sunday — often to have social exchanges with the numerous faculty and farmers’ daughters — was at this little country church. In fact, for years prior to there being student-owned automobiles, many “church-related courtships” for both college and seminary students and local young women blossomed into successful 19th century marriages.
The present Greek Revival building was constructed in 1860-61. Its architect was Robert Lewis Dabney, a seminary theology professor; its local contractor was Richard Thackston (a nearby resident who had descendants in this church well into the 20th century); the hand-made bricks were formed from local clay and baked on site by black slaves and freedmen. In 1919 a church manse for the resident pastor was built on College Road immediately north of the church, and nearly a century later that brick house still serves as the pastor’s residence. A modestly functional church basement was excavated in 1955, and an educational building (with adequate kitchen and fellowship hall), was added in 2001-2002.
It has been nearly a century since the college has had its own separate religious chapel, but the congregation’s building often functions unofficially in that capacity. Baccalaureate and Commencement services were regularly held there until the mid-20th century. Interestingly, as the college’s open campus continued to expand, all of the congregation’s four acres with church, manse, and cemetery space may appear to be college property, although they are not; instead, they form a separate real estate “doughnut hole” in an otherwise continuous campus.
Since the early 1950s the pastor of the congregation (that now includes residents from Hampden-Sydney and the surrounding rural area, as well as people from both Farmville and Longwood University) has been defined as a half-time position, with the other half of that person’s duties being assigned as that of “the college chaplain” (a pastor as needed for the entire faculty, administration, trustees, more than a thousand students, and dozens of other college employees. The church and the college share that person’s salary.
When the educational building was completed in 2002, the congregation approved a forty-year legal agreement with the college that classroom space in this building could be used by the college for weekday instructional purposes, with the college’s assumption of an appropriate share of its physical maintenance.
Burial spaces in the church cemetery, however, are not available for the general public, being limited only for those in the congregation. This part of the church property, along with its perpetual care endowment, is administered by a separate Church Cemetery Committee.
The Rev. Dr. William E. Thompson
Pastor Emeritus, College Presbyterian Church and Retired Chaplain, Hampden-Sydney College
For further historical information, see Dr. Thompson’s Her Walls Before Thee Stand: The 235 Year History of the Presbyterian Congregation at Hampden-Sydney, Virginia (2010) available at the Hampden-Sydney College book store and Bortz Library and the Greenwood Library on the campus of Longwood University.
College Presbyterian Church Historical Photos
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