Samuel Bacote
*This date in 1866 is celebrated as the birth date of Rev. Samuel W. Bacote, a Black minister.
The son of former slaves, Bacote was born in Society Hill, South Carolina. His mother died when he was three months old, leaving him to be raised by his father and grandmother. His father was literate and served for a time as the deputy sheriff of Darlington County, S.C. Bacote was sent to a public school at the age of seven.
He graduated from Benedict College in Columbia, S.C., in 1888. He entered the Theological Seminary in Richmond, Virginia, the following year and graduated with honors in 1892. That same year he became pastor of Second Baptist Church in Marion, Ala., and served as principal of the Baptist Academy. In 1895, Bacote was named pastor of Second Baptist Church in Kansas City, a position he held for 51 years. In his first few years as a pastor, he retired the church's debt and raised money to build a new edifice at 10th and Charlotte streets.
In 1896, Bacote entered Kansas City University, Kansas City, Kansas, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree. He was the only Black in his class and the first to graduate from that institution. Two years later, he received a Master of Arts degree and, in 1904, earned a doctorate in divinity. In addition to his studies and pastoral duties, Bacote was active nationally in the Baptist church. He served as the National Baptist Yearbook's editor and statistician of the National Baptist Convention. In 1913, he edited “Who's Who” of the Colored Baptist of the United States.
He was also on the board of directors of Western Baptist College in Macon, Missouri, and helped move the school to Kansas City, where it became the Western Baptist Seminary. For half a century, Bacote was the pastor of Second Baptist Church, one of the oldest and largest Black churches in Kansas City. Rev. Samuel W. Bacote, a scholar, writer, and prominent figure in the American Baptist church, died in 1946.