BlackFacts Details

Zion Baptist Church, Denver, Colorado (1865- )

Zion Baptist Church was founded on November 15, 1865 by an intrepid group of black pioneers who settled in Denver, Colorado Territory when the city’s total population was less than 5,000 people. Among its founders was Barney Ford who would later become one of Denvers most successful entrepreneurs. 

Like all Denver residents at the time, these black church founders came from other states, although—for the vast majority of these black settlers—the South was their place of origin.  These church founders arrived in Colorado Territory with little wealth and limited education but they were determined to improve their lives in this frontier setting.  They felt church life was central to that improvement and thus founded one of the first black churches west of the Mississippi River.

The first pastor was Reverend William Norrid and the church home was a 20 by 40 foot frame building on two purchased lots on 20th and Arapahoe (known then as Holladay Street).  The 16 founding and charter members included Reverend William Norrid, his wife, Rachel Norrid, E.J. Sanderline, Elmira Gibson, Thomas J. Riley, Carrie Armstrong, Reuben Bozier, Robert Bozier, Jane Bozier, William Bozier, Lucy Boyd, Leonard Bassett, Emma Green, and Jane Jackson.  Thomas J. Riley and Robert Bozier were Zion’s first deacons.

In 1867 Zion Baptist purchased two lots located at 20th and Holladay (now Arapahoe) Streets and constructed their first house of worship.  Beginning in the late 1870s, the church began construction of a brick structure under the leadership of Reverend R.M. Duling.  The brick building was completed under the leadership of Reverend J.B. Fields in in 1883.  By this time the congregation had grown to 200:  about one-fifth of the total black population of Denver in 1880.  By the late 1880s the church began a prison ministry under its third minister, Reverend William Gray.  Zion’s ministry was one of the first in the nation at the time.

In September 1891 Reverend W.P.T. Jones requested and received permission for about 30 members of

Facts About Women