Interim pastor leaving last church in Falls Village

FALLS VILLAGE — The town’s only remaining church is losing its minister. Services this Sunday, Aug. 24, at the Falls Village Congregational Church will be the last for its interim pastor, the Rev. Virnette Hamilton. A successor has not yet been named.

Hamilton, who has served as interim pastor for the last two-and- a-half years, is leaving to devote more time to her grandchildren and to her ailing mother in the Midwest. Indeed, she will be driving in that direction right after the conclusion of Sunday’s services and a reception in her honor thanking her for her assistance in Falls Village.

“It’s a sweet little church,� Hamilton said in an interview. “The people are great.�

Hamilton, 61, was a longtime church volunteer in her hometown of New Milford and entered the ministry in 1993. She is a former pastor of the New Milford Congregational Church. Hamilton, whose husband recently retired, said she tried to stay in Falls Village as long as she could but that family demands eventually took priority.

“You have to do what you have to do,� she said.

Andrea Downs, a former deacon at the Falls Village Congregational Church and a member there for 18 years, said her church has contacted the United Church of Christ Conference to match the Falls Village church with another interim pastor.

“We have to go back into the search process,� Downs explained. “We will create a church profile. Then they match the pastors with the churches and the conference will give us a list of available interims. Unfortunately, the pool [of applicants] is very small.�

Despite its small size, the church on Beebe Hill Road is a busy place. In addition to the Sunday worship at 9:30 a.m., there are Alcoholics Anonymous meetings four nights a week, several Girl Scout troop meetings, community outreach programs, craft groups, food co-op deliveries and various events involving the Lee H. Kellogg School, including a longtime annual eighth-grade “right-of-passage celebration� near the end of the school year.

The Falls Village Congregational Church will celebrate its 150th anniversary next year and its members are planning a prolonged celebration. The church burned in a devastating fire in the late 1880s and was rebuilt shortly thereafter, Downs explained.

“There’s lots of history there,� she said.

The Falls Village Congregational Church has been the sole house of worship in the town since St. Patrick’s Roman Catholic Church, also on Beebe Hill Road, closed about five years ago. Artist Clifton Jaeger subsequently bought the St. Patrick’s building and uses it as a residence and studio.

“It’s very important to preserve that,� Downs said of her church’s status as a place of worship in the town.

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