Shortly after the Civil War the village was populated entirely by African Americans, when it was known as Egypt, and then as Bethel. It became known as Proffit when the railroad line went through, named for the man who bought the right of way for the line. As it became a minor commercial hub, the population gradually became more caucasian. By the late 1920s there were only 15-20 African American families remaining in Proffit.[4]
In 1974, the Charlottesville-Albemarle Tribune covered the Proffit Area News. The paper notes Evergreen Baptist Church as part of the community, with Rev. Blakely presiding.[5] Pleasant Grove Baptist Church in Earlysville was also noted as hosting the Thanksgiving Union Worship Service with Rev. L.S. Ward, pastor of Chatman Grove Baptist Church, Eastham delivering the sermon.[5] Other congregations joining this service were Evergreen at Proffit and Free Union of Stony Point.[5] The Union Christmas service was planned to be at Evergreen Baptist that year.
^"Proffit Historic District Online Resource Archive". University of Virginia. 2000. Retrieved November 30, 2008. Listed in the Virginia Landmark Register (1998) and the National Register of Historic Places (1999)...
^John Hammond Moore (1976). Albemarle: Jefferson's County, 1727-1976. Albemarle County Historical Society. p. 425.
^ abcBlue, Mrs. J.E. (December 5, 1974). "Proffit Area News". The Charlottesville-Albemarle Tribune.
Further reading
The Proffit Historic District Online Resource Archive: A website that provides extensive documentation of the village's history, with a timeline, historical and contemporary photographs, census data, a virtual tour, and oral histories.