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HULL &HALL: African Americans in the revolutionary war. By: Francini Parra & Porsche Bell. Background . Kosciuszko once was surprised to discover Hull, dressed in yhe commanders uniform giving a party for his friends. Agrippa Hull was born free in 1759.
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HULL &HALL: African Americans in the revolutionary war By: Francini Parra & Porsche Bell
Background Kosciuszko once was surprised to discover Hull, dressed in yhe commanders uniform giving a party for his friends. • Agrippa Hull was born free in 1759. • At a age of 6 he was brought to Stockbridge, Massachusetts. • In 1777 he was enlisted in the Colonial army and served for the duration of the war.
Agrippa Hull He was a patriot.
The Return & Wife • Hull returned to Stockbridge. • He was a neighbor of Elizabeth Freeman (the first enslaved African American freed under the new state constitution. • Judge Sedgewick was a young lawyer that help Hull to gain freedom of Jane Darby(slave). • They got married. • After Jane death he remarried.
More Information. Charles Sedgwick • In 1828 Charles Sedgwick wrote the Acting Secretary of State on Hulls behalf • Asking that his soldiers pension be mailed directly go his home.
Prince Hall’s Background Information Life Info • Prince Hall was born in 1735. • He was the slave of William Hall of Boston • He had a son with a slave named Delia in 1756. • At age 27 he joined the Congregational Church and married an enslaved woman named Sarah Richie and after she died he married Flora Gibbs of Gloucester.
War and Personal Information and Fun Facts • In 1775, Hall and fourteen other free blacks joined the British army lodge of the Masons who were stationed in Boston. • Hall protested the lack of schools for black children and established one in his own home. • Prince hall died 1807 at age 72,and one year later his lodge honored him by changing its name to Prince Hall Grand Lodge.
Grand Master Was Hall’s title as the leader of the African Lodge NO.1
The last public speech given by Prince Hall • "Patience, I say; for were we not possessed of a great measure of it, we could not bear up under the daily insults we meet with in the streets of Boston, much more on public days of recreation. How, at such times, are we shamefully abused, and that to such a degree, that we may truly be said to carry our lives in our hands, and the arrows of death are flying about our heads....tis not for want of courage in you, for they know that they dare not face you man for man, but in a mob, which we despise...“ – Prince Hall