Historical Marker: Second Baptist Church of Seguin

Independence Trail Region
609 S. Guadalupe Street Seguin, Texas 78155

Marker # 18789 Text:

Following the Civil War, freedmen and their families settled in communities and sought out a place to educate their children and a place of worship. The reverend Leonard Ilsley, a native of Maine, came to Seguin before the Civil War and remained after the war to assist the freedmen community. He helped organize several freedmen churches in the county, performed dozens of marriage ceremonies, and financed the building of a male dormitory at Guadalupe College. On November 16, 1865, Rev. Ilsley met with a small group of freedmen and freedwomen in Seguin and organized the second Baptist Church of Seguin. The congregation eventually settled in to a small concrete and adobe building on East Court and South Bauer Streets known as the Andrew Neill Church House. Rev. Ilsley preached and provided pastoral leadership until Hiram Wilson was appointed pastor in 1867. Prior to emancipation, Hiram Wilson and his brothers were slaves of a presbyterian minister. Under Rev. Wilson’s leadership, the church purchased property at its current location on S. Guadalupe Street in 1874 and built a building for worship and a school. Membership included several Buffalo Soldiers, successful business owners, and educators, including William Ball, who co-organized the Abraham Lincoln School and served as principal. Ball served as pastor of the second Baptist Church from 1884 to 1920. born in a time of turbulence and turmoil, the Second Baptist Church of Seguin has been a beacon of safety, hope and faith for the African American Community of Seguin for well over 150 years.

Historical Marker: Second Baptist Church of Seguin

609 S. Guadalupe Street Seguin, Texas 78155

Visitor Instructions

Front lawn, adjacent to historic church bell.