*The birth of Benjamin Franklin Randolph is celebrated on this date in 1820. He was a Black educator, an army chaplain, a minister, a newspaper editor, a politician, Early life Benjamin Franklin Randolph was born in Kentucky, the child of free Blacks. He moved with his family to Ohio as a child, where he attended […]
learn more*The birth of Julia A. J. Foote in 1823 is celebrated on this date. She was a Black evangelist and author.
learn more*The Sisterhood of the Good Death is celebrated on this date in 1823. The Sisterhood of Our Lady of the Good Death is a small but renowned Afro-Catholic religious group in Bahia, Brazil. The history of the “Sisterhood of the Good Death” is part of the history of the Middle Passage of blacks from the African coast to […]
learn more*On this date, in 1824, The American Baptist Home Mission Society was founded. This Christian missionary society was founded during the Antebellum South era of America. Its main predecessor, the Home Mission Society, was established in New York City in 1832 to operate in the American frontier, with the stated mission “to preach the Gospel, establish churches and give support and ministry to the unchurched and destitute.” In the 19th century, […]
learn moreMoses Dickson was born on this date in 1824. He was a Black abolitionist, soldier, and minister.
Born free in Cincinnati, he worked on steamboats during the Civil War and saw first hand the horrors of slavery. In 1846, the Reverend Moses Dickson met with eleven other black men in St. Louis and founded the Twelve Knights of Tabor. (They were also called the Knights of Liberty.) This group was a secret society for blacks who wanted to fight for freedom from slavery. That organization used St. Louis as its headquarters and aided hundreds of slaves to freedom.
learn more*Paschal Randolph was born on this date in 1825. He was a Black medical doctor, occultist, Spiritualist, trance medium, and writer. Born and raised in New York City, Paschal Beverly Randolph was a free man of mixed race. His father was William Randolph, and his mother, Flora Beverly, whom he later described as having mixed English, French, German, Native American, and Malagasy ancestry. During his […]
learn more*On this date in 1825, William Day was born. He was a Black abolitionist, editor, educator and a minister.
learn more*John R. Bowles was born on this date in 1826. He was a Black teacher and minister. John R. Bowles was born in Lynchburg, Virginia. Little is known of his youth. By 1848, he had relocated to Ross County, Ohio, where he married Sarah Bryant. Records show they had at least two children. Bowles was […]
learn more*On this date in 1826 Mansfield Tyler was born. He was an African American minister and administrator.
Tyler was born a slave near Augusta, GA., owned by a Baptist preacher, he learned to read and write, and became a preacher himself while still in slavery. He was taken to Alabama by his owner in 1854 and after the Civil War (1867), Tyler established a Baptist church in Lowndeboro, Ala.
learn more*James H. Holmes was born on this date in 1826. He was a Black minister in Richmond, Virginia. James Henry Holmes was born a slave in King and Queen County, Virginia, to Delphia and Claiborne Holmes, slaves on the plantation of Judge James M. Jefferies. Holmes had 15 siblings and worked as a cowboy on […]
learn more*Alfred Cookman was born on this date in 1828. He was a white-American Methodist minister and abolitionist. He was born in Columbia, Pennsylvania, the son of the Methodist Episcopal minister George G. Cookman. He was early consecrated to the ministry by his pious mother; experienced religion while attending the grammar school of Dickinson College. In 1851, […]
learn moreOn this date in 1828, the Oblate Sisters of Providence were established. This was the first Black order of nuns in America.
On that date, four Black women met in a row house in Baltimore to voice simple vows. When the ceremony was over, a new order of nuns was born with the Catholic Church. This community came into being as a direct result of the San Domingo uprising in 1791 and was composed of free black women, living in a slave holding state. At their onset, they were founded for the education of colored children in Baltimore, Maryland.
learn more*The birth of James Theodore Holly in 1829 is marked on this date. He was a Black minister and abolitionist.
From Detroit, Michigan, his father James Overton Holly was a Scottish man and records show that his mothers name was Jane. Holly was baptized and raised a Catholic yet gradually he moved away from the Catholic Church. He spent his early years in Washington, D. C. and Brooklyn, NY where he connected with Frederick Douglass and other Black abolitionist. Holly’s emphasis on native Black clergy was in distinct opposition to Catholic emphasis on white European clergy.
learn more*Robert Hickman, born on this date in 1830. He was a Black laborer and minister. Robert Thomas Hickman was born enslaved near Boone, Missouri. He was, however, allowed by his owner to learn to read and write. Hickman also became a slave preacher for the people held in bondage in the area. Hickman worked near […]
learn more*On this date in 1830, James A. Healy was born. He was a Black priest and the first Black bishop in America.
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