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  • Veterans Luncheon

    Some Middlesex veterans still have their uniforms, and even better, they still fit! These are just a few of the many veterans who attend our annual Veterans Appreciation Luncheon. Each year around Veterans Day, we show our Middlesex veterans how much we respect and appreciate their service. After all, America would not be the home we love without their willingness to guard our precious freedoms. Veterans up and down county are welcome to attend and enjoy good food and share old memories. Thank you! Men and women of character and courage.

  • Elizabeth B. Sanders Educational Scholarship Fund

    Young people, Christian education and education in general were all important to Elizabeth B. "Tan" Sanders. Christ Church Parish is fortunate to benefit from her benevolence in offering the Elizabeth B. Sanders Educational Scholarship Fund to young people affiliated with Christ Church Parish. For all ages under 21. Scholarship funds are available for Parish members, and those affiliated with the Parish, up to age 21 and may be used for, but are not limited to, religious, elementary, secondary, under graduate, special, technical, vocational, professional or other educational purposes. Educational opportunities that can last a lifetime and hopefully enrich many lives. For vocational and trade schools. High school or college. Application forms may be picked up from the Parish office or by clicking on the link below and downloading and printing the form. Elizabeth_B._Sanders_Educational_Scholarship_Fund_Application_Form.pdf

  • Summer Fine Arts Camp

    Our free Summer Fine Arts Camp is for rising 5th graders through rising 8th graders, who have an interest in at least one of the arts:  music, theater and visual arts.   It’s a week of fun and learning Monday through Friday, followed on Saturday with a program for parents and guests to showcase what we learned.  On Sunday, we provide the music and lead the Christ Church worship service, followed by an awards ceremony and lunch for campers, guests and Christ Church parishioners.   Each day of camp, Monday – Friday, includes a light breakfast and lunch, plus snacks and other fun stuff.  We sing, act, create art projects, play games, and enjoy other activities.  And all campers receive a Fine Arts Camp T-shirt.  Activities, meals, snacks, shirts – all are free.   Campers participate in Christ Church's worship service that Sunday followed by an awards ceremony and lunch for campers, their families and Christ Church parishioners. Our Basic Schedule Monday – Friday, 9:00am-3:00pm:  Music, theater & visual arts.  Light breakfast & lunch included. Saturday, 9:00am-11:00am:  Breakfast & Camp Showcase Sunday, 9:30am-11:30am:  Warm-up and Church Service             Sunday, 11:30am-1:00pm:  Awards ceremony and lunch for campers, guests and Christ Church parishioners

  • Excerpt from a Southside Sentinel Article by Larry Chowning - Nov 1, 2018

    During the colonial period in Middlesex, the area known as Christchurch became the center of religious and social life in Middlesex County, and its prominence lasted for over 100 years. The Honorable Henry Corbin of Buckingham House established Lancaster Parish covering the area from central Middlesex to Laneview. Early districts within Middlesex were formed by the creation of two church parishes.  On May 27, 1657, the area from central Middlesex to Laneview was established by Henry Corbin and others as Lancaster Parish.  Probably a little before that, Edmund Kemp on the Piankatank and others in the lower end of the county had already started forming what would become Piankatank Parish and Lower Church.   The early Anglican parishes in Virginia had the power to collect taxes from their congregations.  Tithes were a tax used to support the church facilities, to hire ministers, to purchase glebe land (home for the minister and a parcel of cultivated land, belonging to and yielding revenue for the parish church), to maintain roads and to provide social services for the poor, orphans, and bastard children living in the parish.   Shortly after the formation of the two parishes, an issue arose as to just where the parish lines in the center of the county ended, and this grew into a nasty feud between the two parishes.  This feud would become so heated that it eventually ended up before authorities in Jamestown.  In 1661, Charles Hill, an attorney, was employed by the Piankatank vestry to go to James City “for the defending of some differences” between the two parishes.  The parish boundary dispute was centered in the middle of the county where two of the largest plantations were located. The Wormeleys at “Rosegill” owned 3,500 acres extending from the Rappahannock to the Piankatank River.   The other was Lady Lunsford’s “Brandon” that was located at the end of what is today Burhan’s Road.  She owned 1,700 acres and dozens of servants.   The tax revenue from these two properties was considerable and each parish wanted it.  Sir Henry Chicheley had married Ralph Wormeley’s wife after Wormeley died.  He was living at Rosegill.  Sir Chicheley served as a member of his Majesty’s Council and was serving as Deputy Governor of Colonial Virginia.  He quickly grew tired of the bickering between parish officials and was also tired of traveling on Sundays to far-away churches.  Arguably, Sir Chicheley single-handedly took away the two parish system in the county to form Christ Church Parish, the “Mother” church of Middlesex, just down the road from Rosegill. The new parish was confirmed by order of the Grand Assembly, October 23, 1666.  The order stated, “Whereas the parishes of Lancaster and Payanketank having been divided into two parishes . . . it is granted that the parishes be reunited and to be called by the name Christ Church Parish.  Christ Church remained the Mother church in the county until after the Revolutionary War when the Church of England fell into disfavor with a victorious American nation.  The church building and graveyard eventually were taken over by the Episcopal Church as it is to this day.   The graveyard at Christ Church has tombs of early colonial settlers of Middlesex, of a Virginia governor (Andrew Jackson Montague); a lieutenant governor (Robert Latane Montague); an attorney general of Virginia (Colonel John Richardson Saunders); and is the final resting place of the famous Lt. General Lewis Burwell (Chesty) Puller, the most decorated marine in U.S. Marine Corps history.

  • Church Calendar

    Click on the image below to open the interactive internal Church Calendar

  • Website Testing - Mobile

    Use this QR code to view the temporary website on your mobile device or tablet.

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