Boyd and Martha Stone were running tent meetings in Southern California while Boyd was employed by the U.S. Post Office. They both felt a call to go to a place where there was no Pentecostal work. One day, when Martha was fasting and praying, God spoke to her and said, “I want you to go to Goldendale, Washington and start a work. There are no Pentecostal people in the whole county.” After finding it to be true, they transferred Boyd’s job and moved to Goldendale on May 20, 1930.
They started meetings in the grange for three weeks, from May of 1930 to June of 1930. They handed out Gospel tracks as far as Bickleton and saw a lot of interest and many baptized in the Holy Spirit. The meetings then moved to Snively Funeral Parlor for 18 months on the west end of Main Street from June of 1930 to November of 1931. During this time, church-goers could look through the curtains during the service and see the new caskets in the other room. The first water baptism was in the Columbia River in July 1930, and the first communion service was at Snively Funeral Home with Evangelists Harry Warwick and Arden Ragsdale. Popular songs early on were “Yes, I Know,” “In the Cross (near the cross),” “Redeemed,” “I’m Going There,” and “In the Sweet Bye and Bye.”