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A Brief History of the African Methodist Episcopal Church
In 1787, the colored people in Philadelphia belonging to the Methodist Society met to discuss their mistreatment by their white brethren. Additionally, they discussed building a house of worship of their own. This plan was met with opposition; they were told that if this idea was executed they would be publicly expelled from the Methodist Society.
Richard Allen, the founder and first Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, was born a slave on February 14, 1760 on the Benjamin Chew estate. Deeply religious from an early age, Allen was converted at the age of 17. He began preaching in 1780 and was ordained in 1799. Through thrift and industry, he and his brother worked at night to pay for their freedom. In 1791 Allen established what was known as the Blacksmith Shop Meeting House when he purchased an abandoned blacksmith shop from a man named Sims and moved it to a plot of ground on 6th Street between Lombard and Pine Streets. This building was dedicated as a church in 1794 by Bishop Francis A. Asbury of the Methodist Episcopal Church. From July 1805, Allen conducted serves in the "Roughcast Church." This had been the first brick church erected on American soil by people of color. The African Methodist Episcopal denomination was organized in Philadelphia in 1816. Richard Allen was consecrated as its first Bishop at the General Conference in Philadelphia, PA, April 10, 1816. In 1841 the red brick church was built to replace the old roughcast one, and remained in use until the present church (dedicated in 1890) was erected in its place on the original plot of ground. Allen was an organizer of the Free African Society, a group that fostered self-help and self-dependence. He established day and night schools, and was co-organizer of the first Masonic Lodge among colored men in Pennsylvania, African Lodge 459 in Philadelphia. From 1797 to his death on March 26, 1831, Allen operated a station on the Underground Railway for escaping slaves. This work was continued by Bethel Church until the Emancipation. Bishop Allen was married to Sarah Bass Allen. He was the father of six children - Richard Jr., James, John, Peter, Sarah and Ann. Thus, the A.M.E. Church was born and became a legitimate, viable Christian institution of colored people all over the world with Richard Allen as its first Bishop. {Historical information provided by Miss Frances C. Stout, Church Historian, Bethel A.M.E. Church, Indianapolis, Indiana} |
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