The church, consecrated in the name of St. Barbara, was built for the first time in the village of Grushevskaya in 1781. This church was wooden, and a bell tower was adjoined directly to its building. In 1830 the church was renovated and transferred to a stone foundation. The second major repair was carried out almost 30 years after, in 1859. Nevertheless, on August 1, 1876, the renewed church burned to ashes because of unknown reasons.
In the following 1877 year, on the site of the burnt church, local residents built a prayer house and also addressed to the Don Metropolitan with a request for permission to build a stone church.
It is unknown when exactly the construction of the new stone church began, yet it is assumed that the construction work took 5–6 years and was done in 1884: on October 21, the temple was consecrated by Dean Antony Manohin.
In the first years after the establishment of Soviet power, the villagers tried to protect the church from ant encroachments, and divine services continued to be held there. Nevertheless, in the 1930s the authorities managed to close the church, but not for a long time: already in 1943, during the German occupation, it was opened again. At the same time, the altar part of the temple was damaged by fragments of an air bomb. In 1975, the villagers managed to bring the appearance of the church to its original form.
In 1960s out-of-towners ripped the cross off from the dome, but local residents drove out the intruders. In the 1980s the church was renovated.
At the current moment, there is a Sunday school in the parish and a library.[1][2]