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Oviedo in Seminole County, Florida — The American South (South Atlantic)
 

Foster Chapel

 
 
Foster Chapel Marker Side 1 image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Tim Fillmon, July 11, 2024
1. Foster Chapel Marker Side 1
Inscription.
The first reported worship service for the settlers around Lake Jesup was in 1869, under a brush arbor. For months, interdenominational services were held for Methodists and Baptists. By 1873, the Methodists were holding separate services under their own brush arbor. That year, the Florida Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South appointed a circuit rider, James G. Tyson, to serve the Lake Jesup area. In 1878, the 44-person congregation began construction of a church on land belonging to John R. and Henryetta Mitchell. Many of the new church’s furnishings were provided by Dr. Henry and Mary Foster, who were from Clifton Springs, New York. The Fosters, who had been wintering in the Lake Charm area since 1874, provided the church with a pulpit, altar rail, pews, an Estey reed organ, and stained-glass windows. The Fosters also frequently donated financially to the church, despite not being members of the congregation. In gratitude, the church congregation named the building Foster Chapel. The Rev. Robert H. Barnett preached a sermon in 1879 to dedicate the chapel. In 1882, the congregation purchased from the Mitchells the five-acre lot where Foster Chapel stood.

In 1887, the congregation decided to relocate the chapel to a “more suitable and convenient location.” Henryetta Mitchell gave the church a lot at the
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northwest corner of King Street and Lake Jessup Avenue. Two teams of oxen pulled the church on a series of logs down a path cleared through the woods to its new destination. Congregants recalled that Captain Meredith Brock played the organ and children sang as the building rolled along. The original site was converted into a cemetery. Rather than sell burial plots, the church opted to lease them for a period of 999 years. In 1889, a fire driven by high winds swept through the cemetery, burning oak trees and some of the wooden grave enclosures. Having been moved a year earlier, Foster Chapel escaped the fire. The chapel grew with the construction of a belfry and purchase a new church bell. The size of the congregation grew along with the building, and by the 1920s, there were around 150 members. In 1955, after years of fundraising, construction began on a new church building just to the west of Foster Chapel. It remained in use until 1956 when the new sanctuary held its first service.
A Florida Heritage Site
 
Erected 2022 by The Oviedo Preservation Project and the Florida Department of State. (Marker Number F-1199.)
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Cemeteries & Burial SitesReligion & Religious StructuresSettlements & Settlers. A significant historical year for this entry is 1879.
 
Location.
Foster Chapel Marker Side 2 image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Tim Fillmon, July 11, 2024
2. Foster Chapel Marker Side 2
28° 40.168′ N, 81° 13.128′ W. Marker is in Oviedo, Florida, in Seminole County. It is at the intersection of Aulin Avenue and West Broadway Street (Florida Route 426), on the right when traveling north on Aulin Avenue. Marker located in the edge of Oviedo Cemetery. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 15 West Broadway Street, Oviedo FL 32765, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in Greater Orlando and in Central Florida. It is also in the American South. Globally, it is in the North Atlantic Region, North America, a Gulf of Mexico state, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once New Spain, the territory of the Mississippian Culture, one of the Confederate States of America, and the Antebellum South.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 2 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies: Navy Plane Crash/Jim Jones: An Eyewitness (approx. 0.4 miles away); Lawton House (approx. 0.4 miles away); Benjamin Franklin Wheeler Sr. / Wheeler-Evans House (approx. half a mile away); Oviedo (approx. 0.6 miles away); Harry Homer Boston, Sr. / Harold “Hal” King, Sr. (approx. 0.9 miles away); Lake Charm (approx. 1.4 miles away); Henry Jackson: Homesteader, Farmer (approx. 1.4 miles away); Slavia (approx. 1.8 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Oviedo.
 
Also see . . .  Oviedo Cemetery. (Submitted on July 14, 2024, by Tim Fillmon of Webster, Florida.)
 
Foster Chapel Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Tim Fillmon, July 11, 2024
3. Foster Chapel Marker
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on November 29, 2024. It was originally submitted on July 14, 2024, by Tim Fillmon of Webster, Florida. This page has been viewed 382 times since then and 21 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3. submitted on July 14, 2024, by Tim Fillmon of Webster, Florida.
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Jun. 10, 2026