The Trappe area was settled in 1717 by Germans who worshipped informally or under itinerant preachers until the arrival of
Heinrich Melchior Mühlenberg in 1742. Their first church, which cost 200
pounds sterling, was designed by Mühlenberg. All of the interior fittings were fabricated from local materials, including the pulpit, which is made of American black walnut. The building is constructed of red sandstone (now faced with stucco); the east end of the building is formed into a three-sided apse. Above the south entrance is a date stone inscribed in Latin with the names of the church's founders, including Henry Melchior Muhlenberg, Frederick Marsteller, John Nicholas Cressman, Anthony Heilman (Hallman), Jacob Miller, Henry Haas, and George Kebner. The roof is framed with oak rafters and covered in cedar shingles. The cemetery at the rear of the building contains tombstones dating from 1736 and earlier, as well as the graves of Muhlenberg, his wife Anna Maria Weiser, and their daughter Mary Swaine and son General
Peter Muhlenberg. Although the shell of the building was finished in 1743, the church was not
consecrated until 1745. It was named after
August Hermann Francke, founder of the
Francke Foundations in
Halle, Germany, a center of Lutheran
Pietism where Henry Melchior Muhlenberg had trained. During the
American Revolution, the building was used as a camping site and hospital for the
Continental Army. A monument at the west end of the church commemorates unknown Revolutionary War soldiers buried in the cemetery. By the mid-1800s, the congregation had outgrown the old building, and a new
brick church was built. This structure was consecrated in 1852, whereupon the old building became used for Sunday School classes. A freak thunderstorm in 1860 severely damaged the roof; however, it was decided to restore the building rather than tear it down. A cast-iron stove was then added to the previously unheated building. Renovations in the 1920s restored the building to its original appearance. In the late 1950s, services were once again held in the Old Church in the summer and on
Christmas Eve, a tradition which continues to the present day. A
digital organ was placed in the original organ case in the early 1990s. The church was declared a
National Historic Landmark on December 24, 1967. File:Augustuschurchplaque.JPG|Datestone in Latin File:HMMuhlenberggrave.JPG|Grave of Henry M. Muhlenberg Old Trappe Church Interior 1919.JPG|Pulpit in 1919 Augustuscemetery.JPG|Cemetery and church ==See also==