Six Penny Creek AME Church: Difference between revisions

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The Mt. Frisby African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church can be connected to [[charcoal production]], as several Six Penny Creek community members were [[colliers]]. [[Six Penny Creek and the Underground Railroad]] are intertwined as Mt. Frisby AME Church was a station on the Underground Railroad<ref>National Park Service 2015</ref>. Several local furnaces also aided self-emancipated individuals on their journeys North<ref>LaRoche 2017, 96</ref>.
The Mt. Frisby African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church can be connected to [[charcoal production]], as several Six Penny Creek community members were [[colliers]]. [[Six Penny Creek and the Underground Railroad]] are intertwined, as Mt. Frisby AME Church was a station on the Underground Railroad<ref>National Park Service 2015</ref>. Several local furnaces also aided self-emancipated individuals on their journeys North<ref>LaRoche 2017, 96</ref>.


==Mt. Frisby African Methodist Episcopal Church==
==Mt. Frisby African Methodist Episcopal Church==

Revision as of 20:08, 27 January 2021

The Mt. Frisby African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church can be connected to charcoal production, as several Six Penny Creek community members were colliers. Six Penny Creek and the Underground Railroad are intertwined, as Mt. Frisby AME Church was a station on the Underground Railroad[1]. Several local furnaces also aided self-emancipated individuals on their journeys North[2].

Mt. Frisby African Methodist Episcopal Church

The Six Penny Creek community established Mt. Frisby African Methodist Episcopal Church in 1856[3]. The church was erected on land owned by the Cole family, a notable family in the community. More information on the Cole family can be found in the "Residents" section of this page. The church became a station on the Underground Railroad[4]. It was also significant for being the location of the oldest African-American cemetery in Berks County, PA[5]. Several former laborers at the nearby Hopewell Furnace were buried in the church's cemetery[6].

Significance of AME Churches

The Underground Railroad was influenced by religious denominations, including AME, Quakers, Black Baptists, Methodists, and Presbyterians, among others[7]. Quakers, such as members of the Scarlett family, assisted self-emancipated individuals on the road to freedom. Within the Six Penny Creek community, the efforts of both Quakers and the establishment of the AME church within the community were important. Churches were often established on the edge of a settlement, rather than being centrally situated[8].

The AME denomination grew from the Free African Society, which was founded by Richard Allen, a former slave from Delaware[9], in 1787 when Absalom Jacobs and he broke from Philadelphia's St. George's Methodist Church and established a new congregation[10], Bethel AME, in 1794[11]. Allen was successful in his legal lawsuits in 1807 and 1815 in Pennsylvania courts to secure the right of his congregation to exist as an institution independent of the general Methodist denomination[12]. Allen was a proponent of self-improvement, dignity, and racial equity, and these convictions of his were included in the establishment of other AME churches[13]. AME churches were utilized to harbor self-emancipated individuals along the Underground Railroad[14]. Following Allen's death in 1831, William Paul Quinn took up the mantle and established one of the earliest Black churches west of the Allegheny Mountains, an AME in Pittsburgh, where he served as pastor to the church, which also served as a station on the Underground Railroad[15].

Notes

  1. National Park Service 2015
  2. LaRoche 2017, 96
  3. National Park Service 2015
  4. National Park Service 2015
  5. National Park Service 2015
  6. National Park Service 2015
  7. LaRoche 2017, 12
  8. LaRoche 2017, 101
  9. Dickerson
  10. LaRoche 2017, 133
  11. Dickerson
  12. Dickerson
  13. LaRoche 2017, 133
  14. LaRoche 2017, 134
  15. LaRoche 2017, 134-135

References

  • Dickerson, Dennis C. The Official Website African Methodist Episcopal Church: Our History. AME Church.[1]
  • LaRoche, Cheryl Janifer. 2017. Free Black Communities and the Underground Railroad: The Geography of Resistance. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press.
  • National Park Service, Hopewell Furnace. 2015. African-Americans at Hopewell Furnace. National Park Service: U.S. Department of the Interior.[2]