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E-raamat: For a Great and Grand Purpose: The Beginnings of the AMEZ Church in Florida, 1864-1905

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This book tells how dedicated members of one of the oldest and most prominent Black religious institutions created a forceful presence within the American American community in Florida after the Civil War.

The story of a church that became influential within the Black community in Florida after the Civil War

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This history of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion (AMEZ) Church in Florida tells how dedicated members of one of the oldest and most prominent black religious institutions created a forceful presence within the African-American community—against innumerable odds and constant challenges.

The African Methodist Episcopal Zion denomination established an official presence in the state one year before its better-known cousin and rival, the African Methodist Episcopal Church. When Connecticut native Wilbur Garrison Strong arrived in Key West in 1864, he stood out as the first black ordained minister in all of peninsular Florida. He brought with him the northern Methodist tradition of joyful praise and preaching, an ethos of a plain and simple gospel that emphasized "righteous living" and an unbending commitment to emancipation and hope. With Key West under the control of Union forces during much of the Civil War, slaves and free Black people were able to express their desire for independence from white churches more easily there than throughout the rest of the state, and they gravitated to the church that Strong established.

During its formative years, the AMEZ became one of the first mainline churches to ordain women to full clerical status. Its ministers commanded great strength in certain cities, and its membership included more of the urban and middle-class population than was typical for southern religious organizations, which were predominantly rural. At its zenith, the AMEZ was one of the largest African-American churches in the state. But it faced difficulties—gender issues, idiosyncratic leadership, rivalries between local ministers and Episcopal authorities, and political dissension at a point when the church was attempting to address larger social issues. In addition, the scourge of hurricanes and yellow fever and citrus crop freezes affected church fortunes. By 1905, when the governor urged the expulsion of all African-Americans from Florida and when state laws mandated racial segregation on public transportation, the era of lynching, discrimination, and disfranchisement already had begun and the period of AMEZ decline had commenced.

In this remarkable yet virtually unknown story, the coauthors capture the mood of the post-Civil-War period in Florida, when Black people faced the obstacles and the opportunities that accompanied their new freedom. This work adds significantly to the growing body of literature on African-Americans in Florida and offers keen insights into the nature of institution building within the black community and the greater society.

Arvustused

Through a blend of denominational sources, newspapers, and public documents, the authors have reconstructed the Florida history of a significant but little-known religious body. Their narrative tells as much about the AMEZ Church as it does about the broader Black experience in the postbellum South.Journal of American History

Provides students of Florida and African American religious history with an informative account of Black religious self-determination and institution building in the Deep South.Journal of African American History

Offers us an outstanding history of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion (AMEZ) Church in Florida during its formative years. . . . An important contribution to the historical understanding of African American religion in the South and Florida.Journal of Southern History

Has much to offer scholars and students in the field, especially from the standpoint of methodology, conceptual framework, and interpretive models. The book is quite useful for courses in American history and religion, African American religion and history, and religion and culture in the American South.Journal of Southern Religion

This work is focused, well-researched history. The authors have painstakingly compiled a complete institutional history from incomplete church records.Florida Historical Quarterly

Brown and Rivers have provided an invaluable service to historians of religion, African Americans and Florida, in their painstaking documentation of the AMEZ Church's formative years in the sunshine state.H-Florida

Canter Brown, Jr., is retired professor of history, having taught at Florida A&M University and Fort Valley State University. The author of numerous published works, his scholarship has been recognized with a variety of awards including the Florida Historical Societys Michael V. Gannon Lifetime Achievement Award.

Larry E. Rivers, Distinguished Professor of History at Florida A&M University, is the author of numerous works, and the recipient of the Arthur W. Thompson Award from the Florida Historical Society and the Carter G. Woodson Award from the Association for the Study of African American Life and History.