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The Emergence of Free Black Communities. 5.3. Free Black Communities. A fter the Revolutionary War in the North and upper South many cities had a growing free black population As theses communities acquired wealth and education they established institutions that shaped African American life.
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Free Black Communities • After the Revolutionary War in the North and upper South many cities had a growing free black population • As theses communities acquired wealth and education they established institutions that shaped African American life
Free Black Communities • Factors that encouraged the growth of these black institutions included… • The knowledge that they would be considered inferior to whites and be excluded from white groups • The desire to perpetuate African heritage
Black Societies • The earliest black institutions were mutual aid societies • These groups provided medical and burial expenses as well as support for widows and children • These institutions became self improvement groups as well and encouraged the middle class aspirations of poor African Americans
The Origins of Independent Black Churches • Black churches emerged and eventually became the core of the African American community • Pastors became the primary African American leaders • Integrated churches that resulted from the Great Awakening often treated blacks as unequal to whites and led to the emergence of black churches
The First Independent Black Church • The first independent black churches were founded in Philadelphia by Richard Allen and Absalom Jones • They were former slaves who had purchased their freedom and became preachers at St. George’s Church in Philadelphia • They were insulted by the white preacher’s segregation within the church and formed their own congregations
The First Independent Black Churches • The black congregation split over differences of opinion and resulted in two black churches • The St. Thomas’s Episcopal church led by Jones and Mother Bethel’s church led by Allen • Allen’s church became the birthplace of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME)which quickly spread to other cities
The First Black Schools • Schools for African Americans, slave or free, date back to the 1700’s • These early schools were run by white priests, abolitionists and missionaries • The first African American led schools arose after the Revolution
The First Black Schools • Philadelphia’s Mother Bethel church was the first school entirely run by African Americans • Threats of violence against black schools were common due to fear that an educated free black population would encourage slave revolts • Nevertheless, black schools continued to operate producing a growing class of literate African Americans
Assignment • 1. What factors led African Americans to form their own separate institutions? • 2. Describe the role of mutual aide societies in the black community. • 3. Why did black churches split from the integrated churches of the Great Awakening? • 4. What were the first independent black churches to form? Describe the role of Richard Allen and Absalom Jones. • 5. Who ran the first schools for black students? Why were the early black schools threatened?