First United Methodist celebrates 90 years
Young Chang
City residents refer to the First United Methodist Church of Costa
Mesa as “the church with the bells.”
Since the 1950s, they’ve rung a short tune every 15 minutes and a longer pattern every hour. The sounds have echoed through the
intersection of Newport Boulevard and 19th Street and brought a mood of
spirituality to an otherwise commercial juncture known mostly for
Triangle Square.
But one bell outside the church hearkens back way earlier than to the
‘50s. It sits in an arch along the driveway that introduces visitors to
the sanctuary. This bell is an original from Easter Sunday of 1912, when
the church first started.
Next month, exactly 90 years to the Sunday of when the Methodist
church officially planted roots in Costa Mesa the Rev. Mike Bankhead and
his 172 congregants will celebrate their anniversary with an Easter
service, a catered lunch and visits by former pastors.
The April 7 festivities will celebrate a long-held spiritual presence
in the city as well as the original mission of helping Costa Mesa
residents get closer to God. That goal still stands today.
“Our specific mission is to be a community church,” said Bankhead, who
arrived at First United eight months ago. “We’re not in a suburban area
and we’re not a neighborhood church. So we’re looking for ways we can
help the community.”
Exactly 90 years ago, the spiritual base was smaller. When eight
members called themselves the Harper Methodist Episcopal Church in 1912,
the meeting place was a small schoolhouse on Orange Avenue and 17th
Street. The unincorporated city was known as Harper and it was way less
populated than it is today.
The first pastor was the Rev. Roy Mealy. The church moved into its
first real structure in 1915 at the corner of Center Street and Newport
Boulevard. Harper’s first land developer, Stephen Townsend, donated the
property.
In 1928, the congregation moved into its current building on 19th
Street. The Rev. Lyman Bayard, the church’s 11th senior pastor, headed
the congregation at the time and contributed heavily to how the new
structure was designed.
A written history provided by First United tells us he was a musical
person and was responsible for bringing in a new Moeller pipe organ.
Music continued to play a significant role in the church through the
formation of choirs. Chis Brown, son of the late Rev. Grow Brown (the
church’s seventh leader), even got to know his future wife Helen in the
chorus.
A member of First United since 1922, the longtime Costa Mesa resident
said he has remained with the parish because it has served his spiritual
needs.
“And it’s a very friendly church,” the 88-year-old said.
Community outreach programs today include a shower program for
homeless people three days a week, a food program for needy families and
regular bag-lunch giveaways.
One of the church’s goals is to attract younger worshipers, as only 3%
of the congregation is made up of youth, Bankhead said.
“To keep the church alive and going,” he said.
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