Saturday 9 November 2013

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " PETER WILLIAMS Jr " WAS AN EPISCOPAL PRIEST THE SECOND ORDAINED IN THE UNITED STATES AND ABOLITIONIST IN NEW YORK CITY : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                                  BLACK              SOCIAL           HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Peter Williams, Jr.  1786–1840  was an African-American Episcopal priest, the second ordained in the United States, and abolitionist in New York City. He supported free black emigration to Haiti, the black republic that achieved independence in 1804. Later in life he strongly opposed the American Colonization Society's efforts to relocate free blacks to a colony in Africa.
In 1808 he organized St. Philip's African Church, the second black Episcopal church in the United States. In 1827 he was a co-founder of Freedom's Journal,the first African-American owned and operated newspaper in the United States. In 1833 he founded the Phoenix Society, a mutual aid society for African Americans; that year he was also elected to the executive board of the interracial American Anti-Slavery Society.

Early life and education

Peter Williams, Jr. was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, the son of Peter Williams, a Revolutionary War veteran, and his wife, an indentured servant from St. Kitts. After his family moved to New York City, Williams attended the African Free School, founded by the New York Manumission Society. He was also taught privately by Rev. Thomas Lyell, a prominent Episcopal priest.
In 1796, his father was among the organizers of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (AME Zion) in New York. It developed as an independent black denomination, the second in the United States after the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), founded in Philadelphia.

Career

Williams, Jr. gradually became active in the Episcopal Church, attending afternoon services at Trinity Church in Lower Manhattan together with other free blacks. Beginning in 1803, he was tutored by Rev. John Henry Hobart, assistant minister at Trinity. As a young man, Williams began to establish himself as a leader.
In 1808 he was chosen to give a speech on the first anniversary of the United States' abolition of the international slave trade; his talk was An Oration on the Abolition of the Slave Trade; Delivered in the African Church in the City of New-York, January 1, 1808. His speech was published as a pamphlet; it was one of the earliest publications by a black about abolition.
In 1818, with the blessings of the prominent white Episcopal minister Rev. Thomas Lyell, Williams organized a black Episcopal congregation, which identified as St. Philip's African Church. The following year the congregation was recognized by the Episcopal Church; it was the second black Episcopal church to be founded (the first was in Philadelphia). (It was originally located in Lower Manhattan, where most of the black population was then concentrated. As blacks moved north, so did St. Philip's, and today it is located in Harlem.)
Williams, Jr. continued in his leadership and was ordained as an Episcopal priest on July 10, 1826, the second in the United States. The following year, he was a co-founder of Freedom's Journal, the first black newspaper in the United States. He tutored promising students at the African Free School, including James McCune Smith, whom he aided to go to college and medical school at the University of Edinburgh. Smith returned to practice in New York as the first African-American doctor to be university-trained.
In 1833 Williams, Jr. founded the Phoenix Society, a mutual aid society for African Americans. That same year he joined the American Anti-Slavery Society and was selected as one of the African-American leaders on the executive board of the interracial group.

Marriage and family

Rev. Hobart presided at the wedding of Williams and his wife. Of their children, one daughter survived to adulthood.








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