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Frederick Schmid and the Founding of Zion Lutheran Church
What did Ann Arbor look like 150 years ago? Was it a vast, untamed
wilderness or a small community on the rise? According to the letters of
Frederick Schmid, the founding pastor of Zion Lutheran Church, it was both.
Click here for photograph of Frederick Schmid.
Schmid was only 26 when he arrived to serve a pastor to the growing city's
thirty-four German families. He was born in Wruttemberg, in 1807, and
received his theological training at Evangelical Institute of Switzerland.
Click here to see Schmid's ordination papers, written in German. He
arrived in August and gave his first Lutheran service in Michigan inside a
Detroit carpenter shop. Two days latter he gave a sermon in a small
country schoolhouse on Territorial Road in Scio Township, 4 miles west of
Ann Arbor. Click here to read a description from his letters of that early
church service. That same day, Bethlem Church, the forerunner of Zion
Lutheran Church, was founded.
In addition to Bethlem Lutheran Church, Schmid founded a total of fifteen
Lutheran churches in Michigan. Because there were so few pastors of any
denomination in Michigan, he preached as many as five different sermons in
five different places, every Sunday in his early career. His letters are
an invaluable resource for the study of early Ann Arbor and Michigan. As
he walked from town to town, Schmid recorded his impressions about
everything from living conditions to road repair. Some of his most
interesting observations are about the local Native American communities.
Schmid describes their clothing, living arrangements, and means of travel.
As a Christian minister, Schmid considered the Native Americans "heathen"
because they did not believe in Christianity. His views were not uncommon
in the early nineteenth century, although many people would find them
problematic today. Despite these qualifications, however, Schmid's letters
are remarkably detailed and his impressions provide a rare glimpse of the
interaction between Ann Arborites and the Native Michigan populations.
Click here to read more about Schmid's description of the Native Americans.
More about Ann Arbor's German Heritage
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