[4][5] In the 1770s, Presbyterian settlers from Scotland and Ireland built a log church.
[citation needed] During the war, Union Army soldiers used part of the floor to reconstruct a bridge over the Little River.
There is a pencilled apology on an interior wall that was left by soldier "Citizens of this community: Please excuse us for defacing your house of worship, so much.
Betts resigned in 1869, the church had infrequent supply pastors, but it eventually disappeared from the Presbytery rolls.
[10][11] The site was made a historical marker in 1962 by Fairfield County Chamber of Commerce.
The historical marker is located near Jenkinsville Fairfield County South Carolina on Monjicono Road.
The historical marker sets a point in history where religion was brought to the area and represents an important place during the American Civil War.