Early History
According to the minutes of the session, "in compliance with a request of a number of the citizens of Munfordville, the Reverend John Howe in company with Daniel Brown, a ruling elder of the Greensburg Church, visited this place on the 2nd Friday in April 1829 and on the day following April 10, 1829. The Reverend John Howe then proceeded to organize a Church to be denominated, "The Presbyterian Church of Munfordville". The date of construction of the current building is not known, but estimates place it as being in use within five years of the founding.
Over the years, the church has served as more than a place of worship from time to time. After the Battle at Munfordville in 1862 , it was a hospital housing at least one wounded and many ill from the Federal garrison here.
When the Hart County Court House was burned in 1928, the church served as the meeting place for the courts of the county.
The second floor of the building was used as a meeting place for Green River Lodge No. 88 and the masonic group met there until the late 1970’s.
The church building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.