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Zion Lutheran Church and Ann Arbor's German Community


The Zion Lutheran Church was originally named Bethlehem Lutheran Church, It was the first church in Michigan conducted in the German language exclusively. Missing the faith they had left in Europe, early German settlers asked Jonathan Mann, a leader in their community for help. Mann wrote to the Evangelical Institute of Switzerland is 1832, asking for a Lutheran minister to lead a congregation in the "Michigan wilderness." In response, the Evangelical Institute of Switzerland sent the newly ordained Frederick Schmid. Schmid arrived in 1833 and the first church was built shortly thereafter, at a cost of $265.32. Click here for picture of first church.

Schmid led the congregation through such a large period of growth that the construction of a larger building was necessary in 1849. The second church was constructed for $1,820.00. In 1871, Schmid was forced to retire because of poor health. Click here for more information about Frederick Schmid and the founding of the first German Church in Ann Arbor.

A pastor named Reuther assumed the pastorship after Schmid's retirement. In 1873, he was in the center of a church crisis over the construction of the new church building. Half the congregation left the Bethlehem Church over this matter, including the founding pastor, Frederick Schmid. Reuther returned to Germany. Click here to see document on the church split.

The members that left Bethlehem church founded the new Zion Lutheran Church under the leadership of Herman Belser in 1875. Belser was a German immigrant who had led a church in Sandusky, Ohio prior to his position at Zion. He retired from Zion in 1890. Click here for more information about Herman Belser and to read excerpts from his biography.

The next 27 years in Zion history are rather obscure. There were two ministers between the years 1890 and 1917, but little information about them. But in 1917, there was a storm on the horizon that would involve the world -- and engulf Ann Arbor's German community and Zion Lutheran Church along with it. Click here to read about the impact of World War I and World War II on Ann Arbor's German residents.



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