TheAmerican Missionary Association (AMA) was a
Protestant-based
abolitionist group founded on September 3, 1846 (177 years ago) (1846-09-03) in
Albany, New York. The main purpose of the organization was
abolition of slavery, education of
African Americans, promotion of racial equality, and spreading
Christian values. Its members and leaders were of both races; The Association was chiefly sponsored by the
Congregationalist churches in New England. The main goals were to abolish slavery, provide education to African Americans, and promote racial equality for free Blacks. The AMA played a significant role in several key historical events and movements, including the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Civil Rights Movement.
In the 1850s it assisted the operation of the
Underground Railroad for men and women fleeing enslavement in the South. Starting in 1861, it opened camps in the South for former slaves. It played a major role during and after the
Reconstruction Era in promoting education for blacks in the South by establishing numerous schools and colleges, as well as paying for teachers. It helped the establishment of Black churches and civic organizations. Its teachers and workers were targets for
white supremacy groups such as the Ku Klux Klan. Outside the South it also promoted schools for Native Americans and immigrants. The AMA continued to play a role in the Civil Rights Movement in the 20th century, supporting the work of activists such as
Martin Luther King Jr. and supporting legal efforts to desegregate public schools.
History
The American Missionary Association was started by members of the
American Home Missionary Society (AHMS) and the
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM), who were disappointed that their first organizations refused to take stands against slavery and accepted contributions from slaveholders. From the beginning the leadership was integrated: the first board was made up of 12 men, four of them black.[1] One of its primary objectives was to abolish slavery. The AMA (American Missionary Association) was one of the organizations responsible for pushing slavery onto the national political agenda.[citation needed]
The organization started the American Missionary magazine, published from 1846 through 1934.[2]
Among the AMA's achievements was the founding of anti-slavery churches. For instance, the abolitionist
Owen Lovejoy was among the Congregational ministers of the AMA who helped start 115 anti-slavery churches in Illinois before the
American Civil War, aided by the strong westward migration of population to that area.[3][4] Another member, Rev.
Mansfield French, an
Episcopalian who became a Methodist, helped found
Wilberforce University in Ohio.[5]
Members of the AMA began their support of education for blacks before the Civil War, recruiting teachers for the numerous
contraband camps that developed in Union-occupied territory in the South during the war. In slaveholding Union states, such as Kentucky, the AMA staffed schools for both the newly emancipated
United States Colored Troops and their families, such as at Camp Nelson, now known as
Camp Nelson Heritage National Monument. Leading this effort was
Rev. John Gregg Fee.[6]
Rev. French was assigned to
Port Royal, South Carolina, and went on a speaking tour with
Robert Smalls, who famously escaped enslavement, as well as met with President
Abraham Lincoln, Secretary of War
Edwin M. Stanton and Treasury Secretary
Salmon P. Chase, jointly convincing them to allow blacks to serve in the Union military.[7] By war's end, Union forces had organized 100 contraband camps, and many had AMA teachers. The AMA also served the
Roanoke Island Freedmen's Colony (1863–1867). Located on an island occupied by Union troops, the colony was intended to be self-sustaining. It was supervised by
Horace James, a Congregational chaplain appointed by the Army as "Superintendent for Negro Affairs in the North Carolina District". The first of 27 teachers who volunteered through the AMA was his cousin, Elizabeth James.[8] By 1864 the colony had more than 2200 residents, and both children and adults filled the classrooms in the several one-room schools, as they were eager for learning. The missionary teachers also evangelized and helped provide the limited medical care of the time.[8]
The AMA's pace of founding schools and colleges increased during and after the war.[9] Freedmen, historically free blacks (many of whom were "mulattoes" of mixed race), and white sympathizers alike believed that education was a priority for the newly freed people.
It created and supported Atlanta University, Hampton Institute, Fisk University; Talladega College; Tougaloo College; Straight College (now Dillard University); Tillotson College (now Huston-Tillotson); and LeMoyne College (now LeMoyne Owen). Altogether, "the AMA founded eleven colleges and more than five hundred schools for the freedmen of the South during and after the Civil War. It spent more money for that purpose than the
Freedmen's Bureau of the federal government."[1]
Other work
In addition, the AMA organized the
Freedmen's Aid Society, which recruited northern teachers for the schools and arranged to find housing for them in the South.
White supremacy counterattack
In the mid-1870s, white Democrats began to regain control of state legislatures through violence and intimidation at the polls that suppressed Republican voting. The Association expressed disappointment at the failures of the Reconstruction Era but never wavered in opposing disenfranchisement and continued the struggle over the following decades.[10][11] By the 1870s, the AMA national office had relocated to
New York City.
Overseas missions
While the AMA became widely known in the United States for its work in opposition to slavery and in support of education for freedmen, it also sponsored and maintained missions in numerous nations overseas. The 19th-century missionary effort was strong in India, China and east Asia. It was strongly supported by Congregational and Christian churches. Over time, the association became most closely aligned with the
Congregational Christian Churches, established in 1931 as a union between those two groups of churches.
Most of those congregations became members of the
United Church of Christ (UCC) in the late 20th century. The AMA maintained a distinct and independent identity until 1999, when a restructuring of the UCC merged it into the
Justice and Witness Ministries division.
American Missionary
Its magazine, American Missionary, was published 1846–1934, and had a circulation of 20,000 in the 19th century, ten times that of the abolitionist
William Garrison's magazine.[1] The
Cornell University Library has editions from 1878–1901 accessible online in its Making of America digital library.[2]
^Clifton H. Johnson, "The Amistad Incident and the Formation of the American Missionary Association", New Conversations, Vol. XI (Winter/Spring 1989), pp. 3-6
^Drago, Edmund L.(2006). Charleston's Avery Center: From Education and Civil Rights to Preserving the African American Experience, The History Press.
ISBN978-1-59629-068-6
Anderson, Eric, and Alfred A. Moss, Jr. Dangerous Donations: Northern Philanthropy and Southern Black Education, 1902–1930 (University of Missouri Press, 1999)
online book review
Beard, Augustus Field. A Crusade of Brotherhood: A History of the American Missionary Association (1907); the old official history that sings its praises with no analysis.
online
Blanchard, F. Q. "A Quarter Century in the American Missionary Association." Journal of Negro Education (1937): 152-156.
online
Brady, Patricia. "Trials and Tribulations: American Missionary Association Teachers and Black Education in Occupied New Orleans, 1863-1864." Louisiana History 31.1 (1990): 5-20.
online
Click, Patricia C. Time Full of Trial: The Roanoke Island Freedmen's Colony, 1862-1867 (Univ of North Carolina Press, 2003).
online
DeBoer, Clara Merritt. His truth is marching on: African Americans who taught the freedmen for the American Missionary Association, 1861-1877 (Routledge, 2016).
De Boer, Clara Merritt. "The Role of Afro-Americans in the Origin and Work of the American Missionary Association: 1839-1877" (PhD dissertation, Rutgers The State University of New Jersey; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1973. 7327914.
DRAKE, RICHARD BRYANT. "THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION AND THE SOUTHERN NEGRO, 1861-1888" (PhD dissertation, Emory University; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1957. 5805136).
Fuke, Richard Paul. "Land, Lumber, and Learning: The Freedmen's Bureau, Education, and the Black Community in Post-Emancipation Maryland" in The Freedmen's Bureau and Reconstruction: Reconsiderations, Edited by Paul A. Cimbala and Randall M. Miller (Fordham UP, 1999) pp: 288-314..
Goldhaber, Michael. "A mission unfulfilled: Freedmen's education in North Carolina, 1865-1870." Journal of Negro History 77#4 (1992): 199-210.
in JSTOR
Harrold, Stanley. The abolitionists and the South, 1831-1861 (University Press of Kentucky, 1995).
Johnson, Charles S. "The American Missionary Association Institute of Race Relations." Journal of Negro Education (1944): 568-574.
online
Jones, Jacqueline. "Women who were more than men: Sex and status in freedmen's teaching." History of Education Quarterly 19#1 (1979): 47-59.
in JSTOR
McPherson, James M. The struggle for equality: Abolitionists and the Negro in the Civil War and Reconstruction (Princeton University Press, 1964)
online
McPherson, James M. The abolitionist legacy: From reconstruction to the NAACP (Princeton University Press, 1995).
online
Pearce, Larry Wesley. "The American Missionary Association and the Freedmen in Arkansas, 1863-1878." Arkansas Historical Quarterly 30.2 (1971): 123-144.
online
Richardson, E. Allen. "Architects of a Benevolent Empire: The Relationship Between the American Missionary Association and the Freedmen's Bureau in Virginia, 1865-1872" in The Freedmen's Bureau and Reconstruction: Reconsiderations, Edited by Paul A. Cimbala and Randall M. Miller (Fordham UP, 1999) pp: 119-139.
Richardson, Joe M. Christian Reconstruction: The American Missionary Association and Southern Blacks, 1861-1890 (University of Alabama Press, 2009).
excerpt; The standard history.
Richardson, Joe M., and Maxine D. Jones. Education for Liberation: The American Missionary Association and African Americans, 1890 to the Civil Rights Movement (University Alabama Press, 2015); for secondary schools.
Richardson, Joe M. "Christian abolitionism: The American missionary association and the Florida Negro." Journal of Negro Education 40.1 (1971): 35-44.
online
Richardson, Joe M. " 'We Are Truly Doing Missionary Work': Letters from American Missionary Association Teachers in Florida, 1864-1874." Florida Historical Quarterly 54.2 (1975): 178-195.
online
Richardson, Joe M. "The Negro in post Civil-War Tennessee: A report by a northern missionary." Journal of Negro Education 34.4 (1965): 419-424.
online
Richardson, Joe M. "Fisk University: The First Critical Years." Tennessee Historical Quarterly 29.1 (1970): 24-41.
online
Vaughn, William Preston. Schools for All: The Blacks and Public Education in the South, 1865–1877 (1974).
online
Weisenfeld, Judith. "'Who is Sufficient For These Things?'
Sara G. Stanley and the American Missionary Association, 1864–1868." Church History 60#4 (1991): 493-507.
in JSTOR
Zipf, Karin L. "" Among These American Heathens": Congregationalist Missionaries and African American Evangelicals during Reconstruction, 1865-1878." North Carolina Historical Review 74.2 (1997): 111-134.
online