Sunday Morning Services9:30 and 11:00 a.m.
180 Denny Way
Our HistoryWe are Seattle’s oldest church, founded in 1853, two years after the Denny party first landed at Alki to homestead Seattle. The first worship service was held in a log cabin. The church survived the great Seattle Fire of 1889, and it grew dramatically during the prosperous years surrounding the 1897 Gold Rush. A Walk Through Time - 1853 to the presentIt was November 21, 1853 when a Methodist Episcopal minister named Rev. David Edwards Blaine, with his new wife Catharine, landed at Alki Point. Seattle was just two years old, its pioneer residents scattered among stands of old growth forest. The biggest industry was Yesler's Sawmill. Rev. David Edwards Blaine was sent to this mission outpost of the Oregon Mission Conference by Rev. Benjamin Close of Olympia. The young couple were newlyweds from New York State, who had traveled via steamer to the Isthmus in Panama, then north up the Pacific Coast by sailing ship. Rev. Blaine gave a sermon to around 30 people in the log cabin home of Samuel Russell. A generous $12.50 was raised. The best way to travel in those days was by Duwamish Indian canoe. The following Monday, Rev. and Mrs. Blaine were canoed across the bay to Seattle. They were met by Arthur and Mary Denny, who invited them to room with them the first few days they were in town. The following Sunday, December 4, 1853, the first Methodist Episcopal Church service was held at the house of Guthrie Latimer, where services would be held for the next year and a half. Its four founding members were Arthur and Mary Denny, John Nagle, and Catharine Blaine. Rev. Blaine immediately set to work building a home for himself and his new wife. Catharine Paine Blaine was an educated woman from Seneca Falls, New York who, at age 18, had signed the first U.S. Women's Rights document, the 1848 "Declaration of Sentiments." In 1854, within three months of her arrival, Catharine Blaine was commissioned by Seattle's residents to teach school, making her the first school teacher of the pioneer town.
The congregation grew as the city grew. When the railroads came to Seattle, so did many Chinese immigrant families. First Church set up a mission school for the Chinese in the basement of the church. During the 1885 labor unrest against the Chinese workers, rioters threatened harm to the "Little White Church" for their help to the immigrants. Rev. Dennison and two others had to stand vigil on the steps of the Second & Columbia building for three days and two nights to prevent the church from being burned down, until the Home Guard could arrive to restore order.
In 1897, the Alaska Gold Rush began, leading to the rapid growth in the size and wealth of Seattle. T.S. Lippy, president of the YMCA and member of First Church, was one of the prospectors to strike it rich. His largesse in the city included the founding of Seattle's General Hospital. Due to the growing pains of quick development, the church sold its Third & Marion building and purchased property up the hill at Fifth and Marion. T. S. Lippy was a generous donor to furnishings for the new sanctuary.
In 1919, the Seattle General Strike of 100,000 people brought difficult financial times. As a result, money was borrowed from the national church to keep the church's thriving ministries afloat. These ministries included Bible studies for Japanese and Filipino immigrants. In 1927, weekly radio broadcasts began on KJR. While the Great Depression temporarily interrupted radio ministry, the broadcasts of Sunday services would resume in 1941 and continue into the 1970's on KING radio. During WWII, when the Japanese internment took place, local Japanese families were rounded up and put on trains. First Church members and others in the community who had been supportive of the Japanese went to the Tacoma train station to protest the loading of the trains. Between 1945 and 1963, First Church received 5,800 new members. Dr. Albertson's vision for outdoor ministry led to the purchase of 35 acres on the Kitsap Peninsula. Camp Indianola served for many years as the home of a First Church camping program. In 2002, the property was sold the property to the Pacific Northwest Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. Money from the sale enabled First Church to afford the startup phase of its building redevelopment plan. Camp Indianola continues to be a thriving church camp and retreat facility for the region. In 1958, the Friendly Club for persons over sixty began under the leadership of Rev. Chester Morgan, who served First Church as an associate pastor from 1957-1959. The program addressed the isolation of a high population of elderly residents in the downtown area. Columbia Club for seniors, which offered nutrition, exercise, activities, and health clinics, was an outgrowth of the Friendly Club that operated for the next 40 years. The church also welcomed community groups to its 80,000-square foot facility, such as the Literacy Council, Alcoholics Anonymous, Seattle Men's Chorus, Seattle Arts and Lectures, the Islamic Juma Prayer Group, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and a myriad of concerts, lectures and programs. In the early 1980's, high-rise office buildings emerged on every side of the church, which reduced the number of low-income housing units available in the city. In response, First Church purchased Pulliam/Wesley Haven low-income housing, and managed its 26 units for the next 17 years, before selling the building to Operation Nightwatch for emergency shelter purposes. First Church welcomed the Church of Mary Magdalene's Saturday worship services for homeless women in 1991, which expanded into a weekday program as well in 1997. In 1996, the church also became an evening shelter, opening its doors to King County's Severe Weather Shelter. SHARE Safehaven took over to manage an on-going shelter, and, in 2001, a men's shelter began operation under the auspices of Lutheran Compass Center. Shared Breakfasts for the hungry, held Sunday mornings twice a month, began in 1997. With the expansion of Seattle's suburbs, First Church's congregation began to spread throughout a large geographical area. As downtown's population declined, so did the membership of the church. In 2007 the church sold its Fifth and Marion building and purchased a new site at the corner of Second Avenue North and Denny Way to build a house of worship and a new urban outreach center. The new building was dedicated on January 31, 2010.
Important Dates in First Church History:
1853 First Methodist Episcopal Church is founded What's NextFirst Church continues its ministry from its new building at Second and Denny, opened January 2010. Learn more about our vibrant programming: |

