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Coordinates: 35°38′44″N 82°18′02″W / 35.64559°N 82.300434°W / 35.64559; -82.300434
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Montreat Conference Center
Type503(c)(3) religious organization
Location
Key people
Pete Peery, President
Merri Bass, VP for Program Development and Marketing
Mike Morse, VP of Hospitality
Bill Straughan, VP for Development
Richard Sills, VP of Finance
Bob Tuttle, VP for Center for Youth and Young Adult Ministries
Websitewww.montreat.org

Montreat Conference Center (also known as the Mountain Retreat Association) is a Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) conference center located in Montreat, Buncombe County, North Carolina, United States.

Geography

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Montreat Conference Center is located just east of Asheville, North Carolina and in close proximity to Black Mountain, North Carolina.


History

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  • 1897 – The Rev. John C. Collins, a Congregational minister from Connecticut, with a group of other clergy and lay leaders, purchased 4,500 acres in western North Carolina for use as a Christian settlement for physical and spiritual renewal.
  • 1905 – J.R. Howerton, in conjunction with the Synod of North Carolina (now the Synod of the Mid-Atlantic), purchased the 4,000 acre cove now known as Montreat. Funds were raised by the selling of stocks, and the property became owned by the Mountain Retreat Association.
  • 1911 – Dr. Robert C. Anderson was elected the fifth President of the Mountain Retreat Association, serving for 35 years.
  • 1916 – Montreat Normal School for Women opened with eight students.
  • 1922 – Construction of Anderson Auditorium, a large gathering space, was completed.
  • 1933 – Montreat Normal School became Montreat Junior College; the following year, it became Montreat College.
  • 1942 – 290 Japanese and German internees were housed in the Assembly Inn, which is owned by Montreat Conference Center.[1]
  • 1965 – Policies which condoned racial segregation in Montreat were resolved. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. addressed the Christian Action Conference held at Montreat that year.
  • 1967 – The Town of Montreat incorporated.
  • 1974 – The Mountain Retreat Association and what is now known as Montreat College became two separate organizations.
  • 1983 – Montreat Conference Center became a national conference center of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) when the northern and southern Presbyterian churches reunited.

Further information regarding the History of Montreat Conference Center can be found at the Presbyterian Heritage Center's website.

References

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