Our History from1898-2009: God's Faithfulness through the Years
In the Beginning…
What adventure and determination, fired by a pioneer spirit, spurred a handful of families to leave relatives and friends in distant places to settle here in Indian Territory in west centralOklahoma? Was it some of the same challenge that one hundred years before, more or less, had urged their ancestors to leave European homes for the new world of America? It seemsPleasant View settlers came primarily for health benefits, economic advantage, to be nearer relatives, and/or to be in a Mennonite community.Pleasant View and the state ofOklahomawhichgainedstatehood in 1907, grew up together. In 1892 the federal government opened "surplus land'' of the Cheyenne-Arapaho Indian reservation, after reaching an agreement with the Indians. This included the Hydro area, and soon people came to homestead this land. The early settlers, most being poor, lived in small, unpainted frame houses, in log houses, or in half dugouts where half the dwelling was in the ground and half of it above the ground.
Amish Mennonite settlers came and brought with them their Christian faith, seeking out fellowship with others of the same beliefs and traditions. In 1898 eight families first met in homes with the services being a type of Sunday School conducted by lay leadership, spoken in German, the language of their heritage. Singing was in German and in English. A small building moved across the road north of theAmishCemeterybecame their first meeting house in 1899 when Paul Glugash was chosen pastor.In 1906 the church conference affiliation was changed andPleasantViewMennoniteChurchwas chosen as the church name. By now more families were moving in and settled east of thatchurch so the small building was moved with four wagons and eight horses to the present location ninemilesnorth of Hydro on Route 58. In 1915 the church house was enlarged and in 1925 that structure was replaced with a two-story white frame building, still being usedtoday.Forty seven years latera new wing was attached to the northincluding a sanctuary. In 1997 a large addition to the northeast added more classrooms, gym,larger kitchen and fellowship hall facilitieswhichwas dedicated October 1997.
On March 27-28,1998,our congregation joined friends from near and far for a1898-1998 Centennial Celebrationweekend, remembering God's faithfulness to each generation during those past 100 years.