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Sweet Field of Eden was built as the successor to Ossabaw Island’s Hinder Me Not Church when the congregation migrated to Pin Point. Its triangular plot is one of the first that William Bond and Benjamin Dillwood acquired from Henry McAlpin in what is now Pin Point. They built the original church on land purchased for one dollar, and that building became the center of the community, also serving as a local school until 1926. This concrete-block structure, which is still a traditional single-room church with a small front steeple, replaced the original building. Over the door is a delicate block cross, with classical molding around the entrance and windows. Sweet Field of Eden remains a vital part of the Pin Point community.