Back to Unit 4Biography

 

Richard AllenRichard Allen

Richard Allen


 California Standard 5.8  Students trace the colonization, immigration, and settlement patterns of the American people from 1789 to the mid-1800s, with emphasis on the role of economic incentives, effects of the physical and political geography, [MORE] 

Richard Allen was born enslaved. He grew up on a Pennsylvania farm. With help, he was able to buy his freedom when he was 25 years old. He soon moved to Philadelphia. There he became the first free black Methodist Episcopal minister in the United States. Before this time, the Methodist church did not allow blacks to worship on their own. Whites always watched over them when they met in church. Allen worked to convince other blacks to form their own worship group. In 1787, he organized the first independent African American organization. They named the group the Free African Society. They worked to end slavery and to help others in need.

In a church service in 1787, whites asked Absalom Jones to sit in the back of the church. Allen decided to do something. In 1794, he and Jones started a new church. It was called the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Their new church welcomed everyone.

 

Explore History

Find out more about Richard Allen's life.

The Big Picture

What is segregation? It means keeping separate groups apart. In the 1800s, many churches did not allow black people to sit in the front of the church.

Primary Sources

Read what Richard Allen and Absalom Jones wrote in the Preamble of the Free African Society.