Twelfth Baptist Church, Boston
The Twelfth Baptist Church is a historic church in the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. Established in 1840, it is the oldest direct descendant of the First Independent Baptist Church in Beacon Hill. Notable members have included abolitionists such as Lewis Hayden and Rev. Leonard Grimes, the historian George Washington Williams, pioneering educator Wilhelmina Crosson, and civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr..
History
Led by Rev. George H. Black, a Baptist minister and native of the West Indies, the new congregation moved to Phillips Street in Beacon Hill. The Rev. Leonard Grimes was ordained as its first pastor in 1848. Grimes was an abolitionist and Underground Railroad conductor who had served two years in prison for attempting to rescue a family of slaves in Virginia. Under his leadership, the church became known as "The Fugitive Slave Church." Scores of escaped slaves were aided by the church, and many chose to join the congregation. Early members included Lewis and Harriet Hayden, Shadrach Minkins, Anthony Burns, Thomas Sims, and John S. Rock.[3] Grimes served as pastor until his death in 1873.[4]
In 1907, the church moved to the former Jewish temple Mishkan Tefila at 47 Shawmut Avenue in Roxbury. It later moved to its current location at 150-160 Warren Street.[1]
The church has had many notable pastors and members. Rev. George Washington Williams, its second pastor, was a Civil War veteran, lawyer, journalist, and groundbreaking historian. Williams wrote a history of the church in 1874. Rev. J. Allen Kirk wrote an oft-cited account of the Wilmington massacre of 1898.[5] Rev. Matthew A. N. Shaw was president of the National Equal Rights League of Boston, and organized the Negro Sanhedrin conference of 1924.[6]
Noted educator Wilhelmina Crosson taught Sunday School at the Twelfth Baptist Church in the 1940s. One of the first African-American female schoolteachers in Boston, Crosson developed the city's first remedial reading program, and was an early advocate of black history education.[7]
Rev. William Hunter Hester wrote a history of the Twelfth Baptist Church in 1946. In the 1950s, he worked with a young assistant minister who was pursuing doctoral studies in theology at Boston University: Martin Luther King, Jr. Hester was an old friend of King's father, and was an important influence on King.[8]
Rev. Dr. Michael E. Haynes was active in the civil rights movement and represented Roxbury in the Massachusetts House of Representatives in the 1960s.[9]
Pastors:[10]
- Rev. Leonard Grimes (1848–1874)
- Rev. George Washington Williams (1874–1876)
- Rev. Williams Dennis (1876–1880)
- Rev. L. F. Walden (1880–1885)
- Rev. Robert Fairfax (1886–1890)
- Rev. H. H. Harris (1890–1891)
- Rev. J. Allen Kirk (1891–1894)
- Rev. John R. McCenny (1894)
- Rev. Matthew A. N. Shaw (1894–1922)
- Rev. William Hunter Hester (1923–1964)
- Rev. Dr. Michael E. Haynes (1964–2004)
- Rev. Dr. Arthur T. Gerald, Jr. (2010–Present)
References
- 1 2 Vrabel, Jim (2004). When in Boston: A Time Line & Almanac. Northeastern University Press. p. 138. ISBN 1-55553-620-4.
- ↑ "History - Anti-Slavery Meetinghouse". Twelfth Baptist Church, Boston.
- ↑ "African American Churches of Beacon Hill". National Park Service.
- ↑ Hayden, Robert C. (1992). African-Americans in Boston: More than 350 Years. Trustees of the Boston Public Library. p. 129. ISBN 0-89073-083-0.
- ↑ Kirk, Rev. J. Allen (1898). "A Statement of Facts Concerning the Bloody Riot in Wilmington, N.C.". University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library.
- ↑ Joyce Moore Turner with W. Burghardt Turner, Caribbean Crusaders and the Harlem Renaissance. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2005; pg. 113.
- ↑ Smith, Jessie Carney (1996). Notable Black American Women. VNR AG. pp. 152–155. ISBN 9780810391772.
- ↑ Baldwin, Lewis V. (2010). The Voice of Conscience: The Church in the Mind of Martin Luther King, Jr. Oxford University Press. pp. 42–44. ISBN 9780195380316.
- ↑ Craig, David J. "Roxbury minister Michael E. Haynes to deliver Baccalaureate sermon". B.U. Bridge.
- ↑ "Pastoral History". Twelfth Baptist Church, Boston.
Further reading
- Finkenbine, Roy E. (1993). "Boston's Black Churches: Institutional Centers of the Antislavery Movement". In Jacobs, Donald M. Courage and Conscience: Black & White Abolitionists in Boston. Indiana University Press. pp. 169–190. ISBN 9780253207937.
- Hester, William Hunter (1946). One Hundred and Five Years by Faith: A History of the Twelfth Baptist Church, Boston, Massachusetts.
- Williams, George W. (1874). "History of the Twelfth Baptist Church, Boston, Mass., From 1840 to 1874. : With a Statement and Appeal in Behalf of the Church". Boston: James H. Earle.