Lemuel Haynes
On this date, Lemuel Haynes was born in 1753. He was a Black minister.
Abandoned as a child, a sympathetic white Evangelical family raised him as an indentured servant in West Hartford, Connecticut. Haynes was a soldier in the Continental Army who believed that the American Revolution should have expanded to free slaves. He detailed this 1776 with an essay, "Liberty Further Extended." This pioneering essay was unknown and unpublished until 1983. Haynes was the pastor of several white churches, principally in Rutland, Vermont.
He was socially conservative, supported the Federalists politically, and was a severe “Separatist” within Congregationalism. He published "Universal Salvation" in 1805, a sharp Calvinist assault on Universalism. In 1820, he published "Mystery Developed," a narrative of the famous Boorn murder case.
Haynes was among the first Black ordained by a mainstream white denomination in 1785 and one of the first to receive a college degree, an honorary M.A. from Middlebury College in 1804. Lemuel Haynes died in 1833.
An Encyclopedia of African American Christian Heritage
by Marvin Andrew McMickle
Judson Press, Copyright 2002
ISBN 0-817014-02-0