America's First Drive-In Church
It's time for another posting about one of our favorite a/v collections, that of the Protestant Radio & Television Center (1940s-1990s). The center was created by several Protestant denominations and organizations around the southeast and, in 1949, borrowed space at Agnes Scott College to begin radio productions. In 1955, their own $300,000 building near Emory University was opened and radio, television, and film productions were made there. They had many years of fruitful work and high quality productions, but by the 1990s, things had changed and PRTVC shut down, though their radio ministry is carried on by Day One Media in Atlanta.
In the early 2000s, their productions archive--film elements and prints, audiotapes--was donated to us so their building could be torn down. As we have processed it, some wonderful productions have come to light, including film of the groundbreaking for that building. You can watch those we've digitized to date here: https://bmac.libs.uga.edu/Search/objects/key/4f6f30fbdea84389cd80fccf9f4b338b/facet/has_media_facet/id/1/view/list
Back in 1957, PRTVC's film crew spent some time in sunny Florida to produce the first program for their "Trail Blazers" TV series. This episode was about how Whitfield Estates Presbyterian Church in Sarasota--America's First Drive-In Church--came to be.
Sadly for us, we do not have a complete set of production elements for this show, nor do we have a finished sound print of it. But the outs and trims--in stunning Kodachrome, looking as fabulous as the sunny days they were shot--survive and we preserve them here. Though there hasn't been time to splice these together and show them moving, we want to share some stills.
PRTVC's Towers newsletter from December 1957 mentions the series in production (see a frame grab from this shot below).
Thanks to Florida's Manatee Public Library, you can read online a scanned document explaining the history of this drive-in church, as told by Dorothy Walker in 1981. She mentions that this show aired on over 50 tv stations around the country, as well as that many newspapers picked up the story of this unusual church, and even Time and Newsweek mentioned it.
The film tells the story of Dr. Lowry Bowman in Sarasota, Florida, who had been pastor of the First Presbyterian Church since 1928.
Dr. Bowman wanted to assist his parishioners who had mobility issues. ADA laws were a long way into the future at that point, so wheelchair access was probably difficult. He may also have wanted to bring in some of the tourists milling about that area...
It is said that seeing a drive-in theater inspired him, but I also like to think that lunching at drive-in hot dog or burger stand helped his thoughts along, too--
What if he could create a drive-in church? People wouldn't have to get out of their cars to get into a church building that wasn't handicapped accessible. They could come as they are, perhaps on the way to someplace else, but stop at the drive-in for services. The novelty alone would bring in the curious tourists, and perhaps they'd make church a regular stop on their vacations.
So he made arrangements with the owner of the Trail Drive-In Theater to start holding services there until he can get his own church built. The first service was held Sunday morning, January 4, 1953 and they did actually list the event as "The Devil Takes a Holiday."
Dr. Bowman stood on the bed of a truck and preached through a microphone to the speakers in about 200 cars. An organ, pulpit, and sound equipment were later housed in a small building where the minister eventually stood on the roof deck to preach.
The church eventually bought property of their own from the Edith Ringling estate...
to erect a church building where they could also house cars to continue the drive-in aspect of their church. This postcard image shows the new building, with a similar shot in the film just below it.
And here's the automotive congregation behind the building--
and some views of the parishioners. They even received communion "wine" at their car windows.
That last image is of one of the parishioners who Rev. Bowman had in mind when he built the church.
Dr. Bowman died in 1964, but he put this church and its option to stay in your car to worship into the zeitgeist. His son, B.L. Bowman, Jr., graduated from our own University of Georgia and became a journalist.
This article describes some other drive-in churches in Florida.
Google Maps shows the Whitfield church's location and the shape of the building:
And Street View shows the building still standing in May 2011, with its distinctive tall windows peeking through the trees:
But by November 2022, it had been torn down and nothing appears to have been built in its place since then:
Looks like the congregation moved on in 2019:
During the Covid-19 pandemic of 2020, the trend came back, this time in Georgia:
R.I.P., drive-in church! What a fun idea and we are thrilled to preserve some of its history here at the Brown Media Archives!