Bradford Community Church
The Bradford Community Church, originally the Henry M. Simmons Memorial Church and later the Boys and Girls Library, is a historic church built in 1907 in Kenosha, Wisconsin, United States under the leadership of Kenosha's first woman pastor.
History
The Henry M. Simmons Memorial Church was built in 1907 for pastor Florence Buck. Buck was ordained at the Meadville Theological School in Chicago, Illinois and came to Kenosha, Wisconsin to preach in 1901. She was the first woman to have a ministry in Kenosha and was involved in the design of the church. Buck was later named the acting director of the Department of Religious Education for the American Unitarian Association. The building was designed by N. Max Dunning, a Kenosha native.In 1929, the church was purchased by the city of Kenosha. It was converted into the "Boys and Girls Library," for the youth of the community, and was dedicated on April 12, 1929 as the first dedicated children's library in the state and the third in the country. Closed in 1979 after five decades of service, the city then sold the building to a private developer, beginning a period where it was used for various restaurants and bars. On October 24, 1980, the building was recognized by the National Park Service with a listing on the National Register of Historic Places. The Kenosha Chapter of the Unitarian Universalist Church purchased the building in 1993, restoring it to the Unitarian Universalist Association. It was renamed the Bradford Community Church after Mary D. Bradford, an educational reformer who was also a leader in the original congregation, and after whom one of Kenosha's public high schools was also named.
In 2020, the adjoining car lot was burned during the Kenosha unrest.