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Early Day
African-Americans of Johnson County


Bethel A.M.E. Church - Iowa City, Iowa
Application Information from National Register of Historic Places Form

Northern Origins of the African Methodist Episcopal Church

The African Methodist Episcopal Church has its origins in Philadelphia in the late 1700s. Richard Allen was an ex-slave who purchased his freedom from his Delaware master in 1777. That same year he converted to Methodism and began preaching.11 By 1786 Allen was in Philadelphia where he was a shoemaker with a traditional craft shop that included
journeymen and apprentices. He also owned a chimney sweep operation with several employees. With the profits from these businesses, Allen was able to amass a small fortune in cash and property.12 As a faithful adherent to John Wesley's Methodism, Allen also held regular prayer meetings in which he preached to increasing numbers of the city's free black
population. The formation of the first Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Philadelphia--still known affectionately as the "Mother Church"--was prompted by an extreme humiliation heaped on Allen and another black leader named Absalom Jones when they attempted to pray one Sunday at St. George Methodist Episcopal Church. Until their numbers became uncomfortably large black church members had been permitted to sit on the main floor of St. George's for Sunday services. Knowing officials wanted to change that policy and have them now sit in the balcony, Allen and Jones initially took seats at the front of the balcony. "But the church authorities had actually reserved an even less conspicuous place for their Negro worshippers in the rear of the gallery." Allen and the others were ejected when they refused to cut short their prayers and relocate to the rear of the balcony.13

Allen and members of the mutual aid association, the Free Africa Society, began to raise the funds for construction of their own Methodist church free and independent of the white church authorities. "Actually, Allen had previously favored separate facilities to accommodate the large number of Negro worshippers; however opposition from both races had compelled him to abandon the idea."14 Several years after leaving St. George's, the new church building was completed and dedicated in 1794 as Bethel African Methodist Episcopal
Church.15 "The house was called Bethel, after the example, and...in the spirit of

"John Hope Franklin, From Slavery to Freedom: A History of Negro Americans (New York: Alfred A.
Knopf, 1967), 162.
12Walker, 6-7. When he died in 1830, Allen's estate was valued at approximately $44,000 (Ibid.).
nLeon F. Litwack, North of Slavery: The Negro in the Free States. 1790-1860, (Chicago: The University
of Chicago Press, 1961), 191.
"Tbid., 192.

Jacob."16 Richard Allen's Methodism was northern and separatist in nature, missionary in its goals, and valued education as a necessity for both its members and its clergy. Historian Clarence E. Walker argued that "the founders of the A.M.E. Church believed that Methodism's discipline would transform the lives of their people and make them useful and productive members of American society" by, in effect, adopting the "Yankee virtues of industry, thrift, and selfreliance." 17

Much of the missionary zeal of the Bethelites focused on the South both before and after the Civil War where there were so many souls to convert but also stiff competition for them.18 Little has been written about missionary treks that headed west yet there were several A.M.E. churches established in Iowa during or following the Civil War. In 1865, an A.M.E. church was established in Des Moines, in 1867 churches commenced in Burlington and Muscatine,19 and a year later in 1868 the Iowa City A.M.E. church was built.20 The initial congregations of these churches likely included both newly-arrived northern blacks and southern freedpersons, and African Americans who arrived in Iowa prior to the Civil War.

"Ibid., 194.
"Daniel A. Payne. History of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. (Nashville, Term: 1891, reprinted by
Johnson Reprint Corporation, 1968), 5. "The white Methodists of New York had much the same attitude toward
their Negro fellows as those of Philadelphia. The result was a withdrawal of Negroes from the John Street
Methodist Episcopal Church and the establishment of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church in 1796."
(Franklin, 163).
"Walker 3, 7. According to Walker, "John Wesley, the father of Methodism, preached a simple
doctrine...and outlined a guide to Christian ethics [which prohibited] swearing, fighting, drinking, sabbath
breaking, gossiping, failing to pay debts...Methodists were also required to be plain in speech and dress..." (Ibid,
5).
18The northern-based Bethel A.M.E. Church found itself in the South in competition for new black members
with the Methodist Church, North, the Zion A.M.E. Church, and the Methodist Church, South. Beyond
Methodism, the Bethelites also encountered the strength of the Baptists in the South during Reconstruction. See
Clarence Walker's study of the Bethel Church's missionary efforts, A Rock in A Weary Land.
"Another sources puts the founding of the Muscatine church in 1849. See Marilyn Jackson, "Alexander
Clark, A Rediscovered Black Leader," Iowan 23 (Spring 1975): 43-52.
20 Hazel Smith, "The Negro Church in Iowa," (unpubl. MA. thesis, State University of Iowa, 1926).


During the antebellum period, when Iowa's black population grew from 188 in 1840, to 333 in 1849, to 1069 in 1860,21 many of Iowa's earliest black residents worked in the lead mining region around Dubuque and the river towns along the Mississippi. During the 1850s especially, Iowa City was a backdrop for nearby abolitionist activities and became the home of African American residents, one family of which still persists in town today (see footnote 37).
(Source: U.S. Dept of Interior, National Register of Historic Places registration form)


This page created on 31 Mar 2022

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