Free African Union Society
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The Free African Union Society, founded in 1780 in
Newport, Rhode Island Newport is an American seaside city on Aquidneck Island in Newport County, Rhode Island. It is located in Narragansett Bay, approximately southeast of Providence, south of Fall River, Massachusetts, south of Boston, and northeast of New Yor ...
, was America’s first African benevolent society. Founders and early members included Prince Amy, Lincoln Elliot, Bristol Yamma, Zingo Stevens and Newport Gardner.


Background

Although Rhode Island had abolished African slavery in 1652, this law was not enforced; by 1750, Rhode Island had more slaves per capita than any other New England state. Enslaved blacks worked as seamen, farm laborers, and domestic servants. It was not until the
Rhode Island General Assembly The State of Rhode Island General Assembly is the state legislature of the U.S. state of Rhode Island. A bicameral body, it is composed of the lower Rhode Island House of Representatives with 75 representatives, and the upper Rhode Island Se ...
passed the Gradual Emancipation Act in March 1784 that slavery in Rhode Island was gradually ended. Even after this time, Newport, as a busy port city, remained a center of the U.S. slave trade until at least 1807. Since most sources of welfare at the time were controlled by whites, free blacks across the early United States created their own mutual aid societies. These societies offered cultural centers, spiritual assistance, and financial resources to their members. Founded in 1780, Newport's Free African Union Society was the first
mutual aid society A benefit society, fraternal benefit society, fraternal benefit order, friendly society, or mutual aid society is a society, an organization or a voluntary association formed to provide mutual aid, benefit, for instance insurance for relief f ...
for blacks in the United States, and similar societies formed throughout the Northeast during the next thirty years, including Philadelphia's
Free African Society The Free African Society, founded in 1787, was a benevolent organization that held religious services and provided mutual aid for "free Africans and their descendants" in Philadelphia. The Society was founded by Richard Allen and Absalom Jones. It ...
in 1787.


History

Because Newport was a major slave port, the city was home to one of the largest populations of enslaved and free Blacks in the American Colonies. The Free African Union Society of Newport was established on November 10, 1780 by Newport Gardner, Zingo Stevens and Prince Amy. The purpose was to assist the poor and sick, and to show mainstream white society that blacks could be responsible citizens. They provided members with proper burials, cared for widows and orphans, and promoted the cause of abolition. They also kept basic records of blacks in the community, and hired young enslaved black apprentices in hopes of helping them purchase their freedom. At least 85 members of the Free African Union Society between 1787 and 1810 have been identified by name. Founding members included Abraham Casey, Salmar Nubia, Quam Bowers, Zingo Stevens, Quash Mowat, Cubber Rodman, Cudjo Hicks, Congo Jenkins, Cuffe Mumford and Arthur Tikey. In 1824, the society changed its name to Colored Union Church and Society.


Early Black churches in Newport

The center of the African American community in Newport, as elsewhere, was the church. Newport’s first African heritage church and congregation was chartered in 1824 as the Union Colored Congregational Church (49 Division Street), followed by Mount Zion AME Church in 1845 (1 Zion Place), Shiloh Baptist in 1869 (29 School Street) and Mount Olivet in 1897 (79 Thames Street). Newport is home to a large African-American burying ground called "God's Little Acre." It may be home to the largest and oldest surviving collection of burial markers of enslaved and free Africans from the time period.


See also

* Benefit society *
Free African Society The Free African Society, founded in 1787, was a benevolent organization that held religious services and provided mutual aid for "free Africans and their descendants" in Philadelphia. The Society was founded by Richard Allen and Absalom Jones. It ...
, Philadelphia * Garrison Literary and Benevolent Association, New York


External links

*


References

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