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HOUSES OF THE HOLY
A study in pre-war race relations at
Fredericksburg's landmark
churches
On Friday March 20th, 2009
I had the privilege of speaking at
Manassas Museum. My presentation discussed
the split between the whites and blacks
attending Fredericksburg Baptist,
resulting in Shiloh Baptist (Old Site), as
well as the denominational split between
the Methodist church over the issue of
slavery. The transcripts of my lecture are
below:
View 2-min. Quicktime
video
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INTRODUCTION
Good evening folks. It is
an honor and a privilege to have the
opportunity to speak to you tonight and I
would like to thank each and every one of
you for coming. I would also like to thank
the entire staff here at the Manassas
Museum for their invitation and
hospitality. I spoke here back in the fall
on "The Great Revival during the War
Between the States" and jumped at the
chance to return.
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Tonight I will be sharing
a few excerpts from my book "Houses of the
Holy" which tells the stories of the
historic churches of Fredericksburg,
before, during, and after the Civil War.
There are some wonderful transcripts in
this title and over 70 photos, several
unpublished until now. I will be very
happy to take any questions you may have
at the end and I also look forward to
signing some copies for you.
I'd like to start off with
a couple passages from my
Introduction:
In order to understand the
experiences of the historic churches of
Fredericksburg, one must first look at the
locality and the important role that
organized religion played in the town.
Today, the town is known as "America's
Most Historic City," while the neighboring
county of Spotsylvania is referred to as
the "Crossroads of the Civil War." Both
are literally saturated with landmark
homesteads, museums, plantations and
battlefields that draw thousands of
tourists each and every year. Churches
remain among some of the most coveted
attractions for their historical
significance and architectural beauty.
Fredericksburg has also
been referred to as a "city of churches,"
as its silhouette is dominated by a
plethora of bell towers and steepled
roofs. Today there are over three hundred
congregations spread throughout the
surrounding region. Clearly, anyone
walking through the town can see the
important role religion played in the
day-to-day lives of the town's
inhabitants.
The issue of
race-relations as well as the debate over
the institution of slavery is also a major
piece in my book and the subject that I
would like to focus on tonight. It's a
controversial and unpleasant subject at
times, but it plays an important role, not
only in the history of these churches, but
also in the history of our nation.
SPACER
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Here you see an overhead
shot of Old Town today. This is the
historic district. Tonight I want to focus
on three congregations: Fredericksburg
Baptist Church, Shiloh Baptist Church (Old
Site) and Fredericksburg United Methodist
Church. The others you see here are also
covered extensively in my book. These
include St. George's Episcopal Church and
the Presbyterian Church of
Fredericksburg.
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FREDERICKSBURG BAPTIST
First up this evening is
Fredericksburg Baptist Church. During the
Civil War, this structure suffered
extensive damage from Federal artillery
fire prior to the city's occupation by
Union forces during the Battle of
Fredericksburg. Like many area churches,
the pews were torn out and the sanctuary
was used as a Federal field hospital.
Today, the building remains much the way
it did after the war damage was
repaired.
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According to records from
the early 1800s, the first “official”
Baptist Meeting House (a prelude to a
sanctioned house of worship) was
established in Fredericksburg around 1803.
The original sanctuary and its attendees
included whites, slaves and free
“Negroes.” Non-white members were required
to use side-door entrances and separate
seating areas, as the interior space of
the sanctuary was racially separated. This
trend would continue in churches
throughout the South for years to come.
Throughout the course of my research I was
amazed at how many of Virginia's early
churches were integrated. Now, this by no
means is what we would consider in modern
times to be equality, but it was a
sanctioned mixing of the races.
Beginning with a small
congregation, Fredericksburg Baptist
Church persevered through the years and
grew significantly in member numbers.
Within a decade of its inauguration, the
church boasted over eight hundred
attendees on its rolls. Surprisingly,
almost three fourths of its membership was
made up of slaves and free blacks. This
multiracial fellowship represented what
may be considered a hypocritical
dichotomy, as Christians appeared able to
come together on Sundays to celebrate the
Sabbath, yet remained separatists during
the rest of the week.
Tension between whites and
blacks was an inevitable problem as racism
and rights for minorities became a highly
contested topic of the day. These
arguments often pitted whites against
whites as abolitionists and slave holders
belonged to the same congregation.
Denominations themselves often remained
benign on the issue in order to appear
neutral on the subject. Often this
resulted in shared desire to venerate
separately.
Fredericksburg Baptist
wished to use the split as an opportunity
to relocate. At the time the expansion was
proposed, there were approximately 625
African-American members in the church's
congregation. This group, made up of both
free and slave blacks, had been granted
permission to attend services on Sunday at
the same time as they attended. The
inclusion however was a facade and by
1854, tensions began to interfere with
worship. Separation appeared to be a
foregone conclusion.
A pledge drive was
established to assist in financing the
construction of a newer and larger
building. Despite their limited resources,
and given their social situation, the
minority members were able to raise an
impressive sum of money. In the
congregational minutes book that was dated
for September 28, 1855, it reads that the
congregation's "colored brethren and
sisters" pledged $1,100.
SPACER
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BAPTIST SPLIT
It was then determined
that the black members would retain the
existing building by the riverside, and
the white congregation would take all
pledges and construct a new building in
the center of town. This of course did not
sit well with everyone, so a church
committee was appointed to oversee the
matter. Eventually a compromise of $500
was agreed upon. Here you see the
result.
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DISMISSAL ROLLS
Upon payment, the deed to
the church was transferred. The original
membership rolls on file at the Shiloh
Baptist outline the legacy of the
African-American congregation. In the
first column are listed the names of each
individual who was received into
membership in Nov. and Dec. of 1853. The
second column records the date in which
each member was baptized into the
faith.
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The third column shows the
month and year when a member was received
by letter as a transfer from another
church. The fourth column (mostly empty)
presents the month and year that a member
was reinstated into the church after being
previously removed from membership. And
the fifth column (which I have highlighted
in the box) is the most striking, as it
lists the date of "May 4, 1856" over and
over as the day in which all of the
church's black members were dismissed.
This date is significant, as it represents
the official split between the races. As
the white side of the church "took" the
identity of the previously integrated
house of worship, the black members were
"dismissed" from the official Baptist
records.
This in turn enabled the
newly formed African-American Baptist
congregation to be received into the
denomination as a separate body from that
of their predecessors. Both churches were
then required to draft new constitutions.
After they officially gained their own
house of worship, they were still not
entirely free. Virginia law required the
supervision of a white elder, who was
tasked with supervising the
proceedings.
As was often the case
during this period, white Christians took
a paternalistic approach to their
African-American neighbors that were less
rooted in recognition of equality, and
more on the guilt-driven, moral obligation
to assist those souls held in bondage.
This often posed a complex conflict of
conscience, as the people offering
spiritual nurturing to their "colored
brethren" were also slave owners
themselves.
That said, I do believe
many whites felt that they were truly
acting in the best interests of their
fellow believers. Charity and compassion
is a Christian virtue and despite racial
inequality, decency and a sense of common
good abounded in the Baptist Church. As a
historian I try not to judge people
outside of the context of their time and I
don't want to sound like I am condemning
either side.
I was amazed throughout
the course of my research how different
the histories of this period were recorded
between the white and black congregations.
I some cases the recollections were either
very different or conflicted one another.
I decided to write both sides exactly as
they were revealed to me and let them
stand on their own merits. This
deliberately allows the reader to draw
their own conclusions.
SPACER
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SHILOH BAPTIST (OLD
SITE)
Shortly after gaining its
pseudo independence, the African-American
church flourished, building a large
membership of both free and slave members.
After President Abraham Lincoln's
Emancipation Proclamation took effect, the
congregation appointed its first black
pastor, Reverend George Dixon. When war
ended, members who had fled north to
Washington DC returned and the church
thrived.
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Here is an image of the
original building that I believe was taken
in the 1920's. Despite reaching an
agreement over the split, another debate
developed regarding the legal requirement
of a white pastor shepherding the church.
This concern was addressed
in multiple meetings that were recorded.
Minutes taken by the white congregation on
February of 1856 stated that:
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Whereas we desire the
colored portion of our church to enjoy the
privilege of regular public worship in the
house we formerly occupied, therefore,
resolved, that the esteemed Brother Elder
George Rowe, who has for several months
been laboring among them with much
acceptance, be requested to continue these
labors, and to administer the ordinances
of the gospel among them, and also, in
conjunction with our pastor, to attend to
the order and discipline of the church so
long as it may be mutually agreeable to
the parties concerned, the colored
brethren being expected to make him such
compensation for his services as he and
they may agree upon.
So not only were the black
Baptists required to have a white member
supervise their services, they also had to
pay him a fee to do so. George Rowe was an
elder in the church and owned seven slaves
himself. He had established a familiar
relationship with the congregation and
records indicate that his time there was
without problems. By 1858, Shiloh Baptist
Church (Old Site) was blossoming and its
numbers continued to increase. Rowe
remained in the position of congregational
"overseer" until President Lincoln's
Emancipation Proclamation took effect at
midnight on December 12, 1862.
SPACER
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Unfortunately a few weeks
later, the entire town of Fredericksburg
was devastated. This prompted over 300
members to flee north to Washington where
they established a daughter church in a
large horse stable christened "Shiloh
Baptist of Washington DC." This church is
still in operation today. Those who
remained in town are said to have met
sporadically in homes and old warehouse on
Fifteenth Street.
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It is my personal feeling
after reading some of the transcripts of
the day that the black citizens simply
wanted to manage their own church services
and affairs. And that right would
eventually come, but certainly not for a
long time. In reality, Shiloh Baptist's
history was reset so to speak at the end
of the Civil War. Only then were they
truly able to govern their own affairs and
worship as they wished.
CONTINUE
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