In our banner above you see an embellished graphic ,by B.J. Peters, of a painting by Thomas Coke Ruckle (1811-1891). The church, which holds center stage with two men conversing, is represented as it appeared at the time our nation was born. Lovely Lane Chapel was founded by Joseph Pilmore on June 22, 1772, and its foundation was laid in 1774.
2200 St. Paul Street Baltimore, MD 21218 (410) 889-4458

Ed Schell

The Society deeply regrets the passing of the Rev. Edwin Austin Schell, our Executive Secretary Emeritus and the leading light in preserving United Methodist history in this region for more than 50 years. An alumnus of American University, Ed Schell was ordained Deacon in 1952. He received his graduate degree from the Theological School of Drew University and was ordained Elder in 1953.

Pastor Schell was appointed to Broadway Methodist Church and remained in that pastorate until 1960. In 1958, he was elected President of the Conference Historical Society and worked toward the re-chartering of the society in 1961. At the same time, he worked toward fitting himself to the needs of the Society through post-graduate work in History and in Archival Administration at Wesley Theological Seminary and at the University of Maryland.

The Society's 1961 charter provided for an Executive Secretary to manage the society's collections and business. Pastor Schell took that position in 1962, and held it for the rest of his career while also serving part-time pastorates. He guided the society's work in national celebrations of the Bicentennials of the beginning of American Methodism in 1966 and of the Christmas Conference which organized the denomination in 1984.

Ed Schell became known locally and nationally for his encyclopedic knowledge of the complex history of the Baltimore-Washington Conference, its churches and institutions, and recorded much of that knowledge in extensive card catalog files. He also contributed chapters and articles to "Those Incredible Methodists", the conference's definitive history, and to many other church history publications.

His pastorates included Woodberry Methodist Church on the Jones Falls. Arriving there in 1966, he became involved in the Baltimore Streetcar Museum which was organized that year and in which he remained active after leaving Woodberry in 1975.

Pastor Schell was appointed to historic Stone Chapel in 1975 and, in 1980, to Old Otterbein Church, a United Methodist Heritage Landmark. Through the Strawbridge Shrine Association he was active in acquiring another Heritage Landmark, the Robert Strawbridge House, in 1973 and in relocating the John Evans House to the Strawbridge site in 1979.

Pastor Schell formally retired in 1988, but continued to carry on with the work of the society. Though he was unable to work at the Lovely Lane Museum over the past few weeks, he was in contact with the staff and with many callers in this and other conferences through the end of last week. He suffered a fall Monday and was taken to St. Agnes Hospital where his condition worsened on Thanksgiving Day and he died early yesterday morning.

A Memorial Service will take place next Saturday, December 3 at 1 PM in Lovely Lane Church. Please join Ed Schell's family and colleagues in a celebration of his life and ministry.