Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Old St. Luke’s Church

Sign for Old Saint Luke’s Church

Built in 1852 for a congregation established in 1765, Old St. Luke’s is a picturesque country church with a churchyard stuffed with Revolutionary War veterans. For some time it was abandoned and falling to bits, but over the past few decades careful restoration has gradually turned it into a picture-perfect wedding chapel. Much work has recently been put into the churchyard, with illegible tombstones supplemented by new granite monuments that duplicate the old inscriptions.

Old St. Luke’s Church
Old St. Luke’s Church
Old St. Luke’s Church
Old St. Luke’s Church
Plaque honoring General John Neville

This plaque honors congregation founder John Neville, George Washington’s childhood friend and the man who, as tax collector for the district, found himself on the wrong side of the Whiskey Rebellion. His house at Bower Hill was burned by the rebels. The plaque was installed only when everyone who would have spat on it was dead.

Witness Tree

This huge oak is probably as old as the congregation, and certainly older than the present building. It was recently recognized as a “witness tree”—a tree that has seen the whole history of the United States from the beginning. Wisely, the tree keeps its opinions on that history to itself.

Plaque for the Witness Tree
Witness Tree
Old St. Luke’s Church
Sony Alpha 3000; Fujifilm FinePix HS10.


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