McKissack, Moses III (1879-1952)
Birthplace:
Pulaski, Tennessee, USA
Residences:
- Nashville, Tennessee
Trades:
- Architect
NC Work Locations:
Building Types:
Styles & Forms:
Gothic Revival
Moses McKissack III (1879-1952) was an African-American architect who—together with his brother Calvin Lunsford McKissack (1890-1968)—founded the nation’s first black-owned professional architectural firm which is also the oldest one still in practice. For more information, see the entry for McKissack and McKissack.
Beebe Memorial CME Church
Contributors:Calvin Lunsford McKissack, architect; McKissack and McKissack, architects; Moses McKissack III, architectDates:1927
Location:Beaufort CountyStreet Address:427 N. Respass St., Washington, NC
Status:Standing
Type:Religious
Note:The cornerstone reads, “Beebe Memorial/ C. M. E. Church/Organized 1872./Erected 1927./Rev. G. R. Galphin. P. C./ McKissack & McKissack, Archt’s.” The author would like to thank Dell Upton for calling attention to this church and its cornerstone and the importance of the architects, and for a photograph of the cornerstone. The congregation is named for its founder, Joseph A. Beebe, a formerly enslaved shoemaker and minister who established North Carolina’s first Colored Methodist Episcopal congregation at this site. For more on the history of the CME church generally, see Reginald F. Hildebrand, The Times Were Strange and Stirring: Methodist Preachers and the Crisis of Emancipation (1995).