United Baptist Church (Newport, Rhode Island)
The United Baptist Church, John Clarke Memorial is a historic Baptist church in Newport, Rhode Island, USA that was founded in 1638-1644. It is one of the two oldest Baptist congregations in the United States and is currently affiliated with the American Baptist Churches USA. The current meeting house of the church was constructed in 1846.
History
17th century
Around 1638 Roger Williams founded the First Baptist Church in America in nearby Providence, after being exiled from Massachusetts in 1636. In 1638 John Clarke, a General Baptist minister and physician from England, started leading services in nearby Portsmouth, Rhode Island after he, Williams and other Puritans were exiled from Massachusetts after disagreements with the Congregationalist leadership.By 1644 Clarke's group moved to Newport where the current church was founded and the first building was constructed at Green's End within that same year, which was the first church building of any denomination in the colony. The congregation used the building until 1708 when the first church building in Newport was constructed on Tanner Street in Newport on the corner of Calendar Avenue, adjacent to the cemetery, which was established on land donated by Clarke. In addition to Clarke, Obadiah Holmes and John Crandall were active in the leadership of the church in the seventeenth century.
In 1656, while Clarke was in England — advocating for the Colony's royal charter and religious liberty — a group of congregants seceded from the church to found the Second Baptist Church in Newport, becoming the Six Principle Baptists.
In December 1671, two members of the church — Samuel and Tacy Hubbard — withdrew and joined with Stephen Mumford, a Seventh Day Baptist from England, and others. Their new congregation was the first SDB church in America.