All Saints Episcopal Church in Enterprise, Florida, is a charming historic Carpenter Gothic structure built in 1883 and listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places since 1974. It features classic elements like pointed arches, board-and-batten siding, and a picturesque setting under live oaks near Lake Monroe, making it a lovely example of 19th-century ecclesiastical architecture in a small community.
In the last half of the 19th century a fleet of steamboats plied the St. Johns River from Jacksonville south to Central Florida.Β
The last port of call was the town of Enterprise where Jacob Brock, a former sea captain, built a hotel on the banks of the river where it widened to become Lake Monroe. The Brock House soon became famous as a winter mecca for wealthy northern families who came to party, hunt, fish and enjoy the mild Florida winters.
It was in the parlor of the Brock House that All Saintsβ Church had its inception in 1881. The Rev. Samuel B. Carpenter, vicar of Holy Cross Episcopal Church, Sanford, rowed across Lake Monroe and began conducting services there. Among the worshipers were notables and well-known sportsmen, most of substantial means. A mission was formed and those attending services decided they wanted to worship in a church instead of a parlor. In 1883, they and others contributed funds and furnishings for a church to be built on a corner of Clark Street.
This property was donated for a church in the 1870s by a grove owner named Lester Clark. At the time the church was built it was to serve Orange City as well as Enterprise and in later years, DeBary and Deltona.
Count Frederick De Bary, a wealthy champagne distributor, whose winter home still stands, furnished most of the lumber for the church, even though he was not an Episcopalian. The Brock family contributed money and Frank Storer of Boston was a generous giver. Storer served as the first treasurer of the church.
The architecture of the church became known as Florida Gothic and was designed by a man who built many Florida churches during the era. An early picture shows its outside walls of natural cypress and the whole enclosed by a white picket fence.
The Church proper, constructed entirely of virgin timber, longleaf and curly pine and cypress, is for the most part in its original state except for two additions, a small sacristy built on the rear in the 1950s and a front porch and ramp added in 1971.
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ON DECEMBER 25, Christmas services, for the first time in 10 years, were conducted in historic All Saints Episcopal Church in Enterprise. The late 1880s and the 1890s had not been kind to Enterprise: The yellow fever epidemic in 1886, the loss of the county seat to DeLand by 1889 and freezes in 1894-95 culminated in dis-incorporation of the town in 1895. Christmas celebrations in those years were staged at the school by students. But in December 1897, according to a report in The Florida Times-Union, church members βdecked the hallsβ with cedar, yellow jasmine, roses and palm leaves, and Dr. H.W. Little of DeLand βpreached one of his eloquent sermons to a large and appreciative congregation.β Choir soloist Miss Hettie Bodine, accompanied by Mrs. W.H. Barrett, βpleased everyone with her beautiful song.β
The All Saints congregation, established in 1881, first met in the parlor of the famous Brock House. The Rev. Samuel B. Carpenter, vicar of Holy Cross Episcopal in Sanford, rowed across Lake Monroe to lead services. The Florida Gothic Style church was built in 1883 on land given by grove owner Lester Clark. The virgin longleaf pine and cypress lumber was donated by Count Frederick DeBary.Β
All Saints Church survives today as one of the oldest and finest examples of its type in Central Florida and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.Β