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Sold as a child along with his family to a farmer in
Delaware, Allen began his ascent in 1777, when he was
converted to Methodism by Freeborn Garretson, an itinerant
preacher. Garretson also converted Allen's master and
convinced him that on Judgment Day slaveholders would be
"weighted in the balance, and . . . found wanting." Allowed
by his repentant owner to buy his freedom, Allen earned a
living sawing cordwood and driving a wagon during the
Revolutionary War. After the war he furthered the Methodist
cause by becoming a "licensed exhorter," preaching to blacks
and whites from New York to South Carolina. His efforts
attracted the attention of Methodist leaders, including
Francis Asbury, the first American bishop of the Methodist
Church. In 1786 Allen was appointed as an assistant minister
in Philadelphia, serving the racially mixed congregation of
St. Georgežs Methodist Church. The following year he and
Absalom Jones, another black preacher, joined other
ex-slaves and Quaker philanthropists to form the Free
African Society, a quasi-religious benevolent organization
that offered fellowship and mutual aid to "free Africans and
their descendants." |
Allen remained a staunch Methodist throughout his life. In
1789, when the Free African Society adopted various Quaker
practices, such as having fifteen minutes of silence at its
meetings, Allen led a withdrawal of those who preferred more
enthusiastic Methodist practices. In 1794 he rejected an
offer to become the pastor of the church the Free African
Society had built, St. Thomas's African Episcopal Church, a
position ultimately accepted by Absalom Jones. A large
majority of the society had chosen to affiliate with the
white Episcopal (formerly Anglican) Church because much of
the city's black community had been Anglican since the
1740s. "I informed them that I could not be anything else
but a Methodist, as I was born and awakened under them,"
Allen recalled.
To reconcile his faith and his African-American identity,
Allen decided to form his own congregation. He gathered a
group of ten black Methodists and took over a blacksmith's
shop in the increasingly black southern section of the city,
converting it to the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal
Church. Although the Bethel Church opened in a ceremony led
by Bishop Francis Asbury in July 1794, its tiny congregation
worshiped "separate from our white brethren."
Allen's decision to found a black congregation was partly a
response to white racism. Although most white Methodists in
the 1790s favored emancipation, they did not treat free
blacks as equals. They refused to allow African-Americans to
be buried in the congregationžs cemetery and, in a famous
incident in 1792, segregated them into a newly built gallery
of St. George's Methodist Church. But Allen's action also
reflected a desire among African- Americans to control their
religious lives, to have the power, for example, "to call
any brother that appears to us adequate to the task to
preach or exhort as a local preacher, without the
interference of the Conference." By 1795 the congregation of
Allen's Bethel Church numbered 121; a decade later it had
grown to 457, and by 1813 it had reached 1,272.
Bethel's rapid expansion reflected the growth of
Philadelphia's black population, which numbered nearly
10,000 by 1810, and the appeal of Methodist practices. Newly
freed blacks welcomed "love feasts," which allowed the full
expression of emotions repressed under slavery. They were
attracted as well by the church's strict system of
discipline--its communal sanctions against drinking,
gambling, and infidelity--which helped them bring order to
their lives. Allen's preaching also played a role; the
excellence of his sermons was recognized in 1799, when
Bishop Asbury ordained him as the first black deacon of the
Methodist Church.
But over the years Allen and other blacks grew dissatisfied
with Methodism, as white ministers retreated from their
antislavery principles and attempted to curb the autonomy of
African-American congregations. In 1807 the Bethel Church
added an "African Supplement" to its articles of
incorporation; in 1816 it won legal recognition as an
independent church. In the same year Allen and
representatives from four other black Methodist
congregations (in Baltimore; Wilmington, Delaware; Salem,
New Jersey; and Attleboro, Pennsylvania) met at the Bethel
Church to organize a new denomination, the African Methodist
Episcopal Church. Allen was chosen as the first bishop of
the church, the first fully independent black denomination
in America. He had succeeded in charting a separate
religious identity for African-Americans.
Allen also recognized the importance of education to the
future of the African-American community. In 1795 he opened
a day school for sixty children and in 1804 founded the
"Society of Free People of Colour for Promoting the
Instruction and School Education of Children of African
Descent." By 1811 there were no fewer than 11 black schools
in the city.
But where did Allen think "free people of colour" should
look for their future? This question had arisen in
Philadelphia in 1787, when William Thornton had promoted a
plan devised by antislavery groups in London to settle free
American blacks (and emancipated slaves from the West
Indies) in Sierra Leone, an independent state they had
founded on the west coast of Africa. Many blacks in Boston
and Newport had endorsed this scheme, but the members of
Philadelphiažs Free African Society had rejected it. They
preferred to seek advancement in America, but on their own
cultural terms. The process took place on two levels: As a
social group, Philadelphia blacks embraced their ancestral
heritage by forming "African" churches and benevolent
societies. As individuals, however, they affirmed their
American identity by taking English names (although
virtually never those of their former owners). This dual
strategy brought pride but not significant gains in wealth
and status. Nonetheless, Philadelphiažs African-Americans
rejected colonization when the issue was raised again just
after 1800: only four people signed up for emigration to
Sierra Leone.
Instead, the city's black community petitioned the state and
national governments to end slavery and the slave trade and
repeal the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793, which allowed
slaveowners to seize blacks without a warrant. As if to
underline the importance of these political initiatives,
Allen was temporarily seized in 1806 as a fugitive slave,
showing that even the most prominent northern blacks could
not be sure of their freedom. This experience may account
for Allen's initial support for the American Colonization
Society, a predominantly white organization founded in 1817
to promote the settlement of free blacks in Africa. This
scheme was immediately condemned at a mass meeting of nearly
3,000 Philadelphia blacks, who set forth a different vision
of the African-American future: "Whereas our ancestors (not
of choice) were the first successful cultivators of the
wilds of America, we their descendants feel ourselves
entitled to participate in the blessings of her luxuriant
soil."
Philadelphia's black community, including Allen, was more
favorably inclined toward the Haitian Emigration Society,
which was founded in 1824 to help African-Americans settle
in that island republic. But when that venture failed, Allen
forcefully urged blacks to remain in the United States. In
November 1827 he made a compelling argument in Freedomžs
Journal, the nationžs first black newspaper: "This land
which we have watered with our tears and our blood is now
our mother country."
Born a slave of African ancestry, Allen learned to live as a
free man in white America, rejecting emigration and
preserving his cultural identity by creating separate
African-American institutions. But it meant that he cast his
lot, and that of his descendants, with a society pervaded by
racism. It was a brave decision, both characteristic of the
man who made it and indicative of the limited choices
available to those freed from the bonds of slavery.
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