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Vacation Bible School 2026
Illumination Station
Shining a Light on Who Jesus Really Is
June 29 – July 1, 2026
Register Now
Join Us for Vacation Bible School!
Historic St. Paul AME Church invites children and families to join us for Vacation Bible School 2026: Illumination Station. This exciting VBS experience will help students discover who Jesus really is through Bible lessons, worship, activities, crafts, fellowship, and fun.
This year’s theme is “Shining a Light on Who Jesus Really Is.” Together, we will learn how Jesus is the Light of the World and how we can follow His light every day.
“I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”
— John 8:12
Event Details
Dates: June 29 – July 1, 2026
Location: Historic St. Paul AME Church
Address: 251 N. Upper St., Lexington, Kentucky 40507
Theme: Illumination Station
What Students Can Expect
- Bible lessons
- Music and worship
- Games and activities
- Crafts and creative learning
- Faith, fellowship, and friends
All Are Welcome!
We look forward to welcoming students and families for an exciting time of learning, growing, and shining the light of Jesus together.
Register for VBS 2026
Please complete the registration form below for each student who will attend Vacation Bible School.
Historic St. Paul AME Church
251 N. Upper St., Lexington, Kentucky 40507
Phone: (859) 255-7945
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Community Resource Fair 2026
Join Historic St. Paul A.M.E. Church for a day of community support, services, family activities, and fellowship.
Saturday, May 23, 2026 | 10:00 AM – 3:00 PM
Historic St. Paul A.M.E. Church
251 N. Upper Street, Lexington, KY 40507
Historic St. Paul A.M.E. Church invites you to join us for our Community Resource Fair 2026—a day designed to bring people together, connect families with helpful resources and services, and create a welcoming space for fellowship and community engagement.
Event Details
Date: Saturday, May 23, 2026
Time: 10:00 AM – 3:00 PM
Location: Historic St. Paul A.M.E. Church
251 N. Upper Street
Lexington, KY 40507
Who Should Attend
Individuals, families, seniors, youth, and community members seeking helpful resources, services, and a day of fellowship.
What to Expect
Community resource information
Family-friendly activities
Kids’ fun
Local organizations and service providers
Food vendors and community engagement
Event Flyers
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Vendor Information
We are welcoming vendors who would like to be part of this community-focused event.
Vendor Categories & Fees:
🔹 For-Profit Vendors: $35
🔹 Food Vendors: $100
🔹 Non-Profit Organizations: $0
Vendor space is limited and will be assigned on a first-come, first-served basis. This is an excellent opportunity to showcase your products, services, and mission while connecting with the community.
Vendor Setup:
Vendors may begin setup at 9:00 AM on the day of the event. Vendors are responsible for their own setup, including tables, chairs, tents, displays, and any other materials needed for their space. All setup items must fit within the assigned 10' x 10' vendor space.
Vendor Registration
Complete your vendor registration below to reserve your space.
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Book a Historic St. Paul AME Church Guided Tour
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We Are Now an Official Underground Railroad Site
Historic St. Paul A.M.E. Church has been officially added to the National Park Service’s Underground Railroad Network to Freedom, recognizing our 1826 sanctuary as a verified Underground Railroad site of national significance.
Why This Matters
Historic St. Paul holds an extraordinary place in Kentucky and American history:
- Our sanctuary hosted the 1897 funeral of Lewis Garrard Clarke, the freedom seeker whose life inspired the character George Harris in Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
- After escaping enslavement in Madison County, Clarke became a national abolitionist lecturer and spoke at St. Paul in 1892.
- At his death, he received unprecedented honors: his body lay in state at the Main Street Auditorium (now the Lexington Opera House) — the first tribute of its kind ever given to a Black man in Kentucky.
- Built in 1826, our church served as an active Underground Railroad station, with a hidden upper room and a stairwell behind the pulpit where freedom seekers found refuge.
- To protect them further, the church purchased the adjacent city stray pen, helping to mask scents from tracking dogs.
- Oral tradition affirms that Lewis Clarke, Lewis Hayden, and others were aided through this network of protection and faith.
Today, Historic St. Paul remains one of Kentucky’s few surviving Underground Railroad–era sites, preserving tangible links to faith, resistance, and freedom.
Our Giving Tuesday Preservation Campaign now continues under the banner of our national designation within the Underground Railroad Network to Freedom.
Your generosity ensures that this sacred sanctuary continues to stand as a lasting witness to faith, courage, and freedom.
All gifts support the remaining costs of the sanctuary’s emergency stabilization and the next phase of restoration for our historic 1826 sanctuary.
Every contribution — large or small — helps safeguard this national treasure.
A Message from Our Pastor
“The birth of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in 18th-century Philadelphia, we have been tasked with housing the homeless, educating those who desired to read and write, feeding those who could not feed themselves, and most importantly, introducing them to a God who liberates the captive and frees the prisoner. Historic St. Paul took up that mantle, and for decades in antebellum Lexington, our congregation cared for those who were yearning for liberation from enslavement. Within our sacred space, many enslaved men and women found a safe haven on their journey North to freedom. This acknowledgement is a signal moment in our history which we do not take lightly because it was not only the just thing to do, not only the honorable thing to do, it was the righteous thing to do. It was, and is, our sacred duty to care for those seeking justice and freedom, and we will not stop until all people see justice and are free.”
— Rev. Dr. Walter R. Henry, Pastor, Historic St. Paul A.M.E. Church
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Pastoral Leadership
| Year | Pastor | Year | Pastor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1820 | William Smith | 1896 | J. T. Morrow |
| Mrs. Smith | 1900 | A. J. Chambers | |
| James Turner (1815–1885) | 1902 | A. H. Ross | |
| 1827 | Daniel Francis | 1903 | J. H. Byrd |
| Henry Lytle | 1904 | C. C. Townsend | |
| Christopher Brand | 1909 | E. A. Clarke | |
| Elias Wren | 1912 | J. C. Anderson | |
| 1838 (City Directory) | Isaiah Whitaker | 1913–1919 | Otho Eli Jones |
| Liberty Ross | 1919 | David Johnson | |
| Andrew Bryant | 1922 | A. T. Clark | |
| Moses Pittman | 1924 | J. O. Johnson | |
| Hueson Talbot | 1926 | Frank Madison Reid | |
| Samuel Keys | 1932 | Dr. Frederick Douglass Coleman, Sr. | |
| Nelson Saunders | 1935 | George A. Singleton (6 months) | |
| 1865 | David Smith | 1936 | Thomas M. Greene (13th) |
| 1865 | Rev. C. T. Shaffer, M.D., D.D. (later Bishop) | 1938 | H. M. McLinn |
| 1866–1869 | Grafton H. Graham | 1939 | Harrison J. Bryant |
| 1869–1871 | Levi Evans | 1942 | C. S. Spivey |
| 1871 | G. B. Stanberry | 1942–1944 | William H. White |
| 1872 | J. W. Gazzaway | 1950–1952 | Henry M. Green |
| 1876 | John W. Asbury | 1952–1956 | Joseph Reid |
| 1879 | J. W. Gazzaway | 1956–1968 | C. T. Buchanan |
| 1880 | L. F. Lindsey | 1968–1974 | R. L. Parker Sr. |
| 1881 | R. G. Whitman | 1974–1980 | H. L. Parks |
| 1883 | Levi Hamilton | 1980–1989 | Fredrick D. Smith |
| 1884 | J. L. Grisby | 1989–1994 | Robert E. Keesee |
| 1885 | John M. Abby | 1994–1997 | James Stowe |
| 1887 | James M. Turner (9–7–1911) | 1997–1999 | George Moore |
| 1889 | Enoch Johnson | 1999–2006 | Kenneth E. Paris |
| 1890 | Jesse Smith | 2006–2007 | Kenneth E. Golpin |
| 1891 | P. A. Mattews | 2007–2014 | Troy Thomas |
| 1892 | John W. Pickett | 2014–2018 | William R. T. Hale |
| 1893 | A. J. Chambers | 2018–2023 | Dr. Robert A. Strode |
| 2023–2025 | Dr. Stephanie M. Raglin | ||
| 2025 | Rev. Dr. Walter R. Henry (Current Pastor) |



