Preacher on the Go
Tiny Smith Island has three churches but only one pastor, who gets around by boat and Golf Cart
- By T. Edward Nickens
- Smithsonian.com, May 01, 2001, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
It is noon by the time we reach Rhodes Point, and the congregation is already seated. As we hustle up the steps, my eyes are drawn to flowers on the fresh grave of Leon Marsh, the last of Rhodes Point’s builders of wooden boats. His was the third funeral service Edmund has led here. Another two residents recently moved to mainland nursing homes. “That’s 10 percent of the population, gone since I arrived,” Edmund told me. Its parts are many, I recalled. But not as many as before.
Pastor Rick is running out of gas. From the pulpit, he asks for a cup of water, and a young girl slips him a clear glass jar, full to overflowing. In Joshua Thomas’ day, colorful nicknames accompanied the most exuberant preachers, and they were a stern lot: “Son of Thunder” and “Devil Driver.” Edmund is different. “We all have gifts,” he tells his congregation. “I’m comfortable with preaching, but I think I am best with people. Out there with you.”
After this last service, Edmund and I walk a short distance to a house where wire crab pots take up much of the front yard. Sheila Bradshaw already has lunch on the table, and soon I’m into my third helping of crabs and howling over Pal’s rendition of Edmund winning 250 pounds of frozen bait at the recent waterman’s banquet—the only man on Smith Island with no use for it whatsoever. It’s not long before the conversation turns to the island’s rapidly receding shoreline.
“I’ll tell you, I don’t worry about the erosion too much,” Pal Bradshaw says. He is a big man, with a quick smile beneath a salt-and-pepper mustache. He points out a window, across the creek toward a thin strip of marsh, beyond which the open Chesapeake rolls to the horizon. When it goes? “Won’t be nothing between us and the Bay,” he says, matter-of-factly. “But if you ain’t got young people and you ain’t got crabs, then the island’s gone anyways.”
One body, many parts.
Earlier, on the ride over to Rhodes Point in the golf cart, Edmund had stomped on the brakes, pulled off the road and photographed a heron. He told me that sometimes at night, on his walks around town, he passes the Ewell church and stops for a moment, thinking about his favorite stained-glass window there. It pictures a large fortress clinging to a spire of rock. Massive waves thunder into the cliffs, and foam nearly reaches the stronghold. “It’s called ‘A Mighty Fortress Is Our God,’” he said, “and I think, ‘Wow...that’s Smith Island.’” Then he steered the golf cart back on the road, heading, as always, for high ground.
by T. Edward Nickens
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Comments (1)
I have more of a question then a comment. I have been reading about Rev. Joshua Thomas since he was supposed to be my Grandmother's great uncle and find it difficult to find information about his brothers, who they were and when they were born. Rev. Thomas is more "famous" then any of his brothers but everything I have been able to come across just says that he has brothers but does not mention any names etc. I have heard thru family gossip the the canoe "Methodist" is in a museum on either Tangier or Deal Island and I cannot pinpoint which one it is at. I would love to be able to come see the canoe for myself but have no idea where it is. Also my Grandmother had a brother and sister stillborn and they are buried on Tangier Island supposedly how can I find out if this is correct as I would like to see their graves as well as the other family sites on my visit. If you can help me I would appreciate it so much or steer me in the right direction. So far I have hit more dead ends then anything else. Thank you for taking the time to get back to me and for helping answer my questions.
Posted by Diane Miller on October 20,2009 | 05:28 PM