A.M.E. Zion Church of Kingston

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Mount Zion Church and Cemetery
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A.M.E. Zion Church, c. 2019
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Location26 Franklin St., Kingston, New York
Coordinates 41°55′48.5″N74°0′31.5″W / 41.930139°N 74.008750°W / 41.930139; -74.008750 Coordinates: 41°55′48.5″N74°0′31.5″W / 41.930139°N 74.008750°W / 41.930139; -74.008750
NRHP reference No. 100006224 [1]
Added to NRHPMarch 3, 2021

The A.M.E. Zion Church of Kingston (previously known as Franklin Street AME Zion Church) is an African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church located in Kingston, New York. [2] Founded in 1848, as a land grant from wealthy Black residents, Mrs. Sarah-Ann Hasbrouck and her husband, Alexander, it is the oldest continuous African-American congregation in Kingston and Ulster County. [3] The church is located at 26 Franklin Street in the city's Fourth Ward.

Contents

Building

The original church was constructed of wood (ca. 1848) at the junction of Union and Bowery Avenue (now Broadway and Franklin Street).  Later the congregation moved to 26 Franklin Street and a new (wooden) church was built in 1863. The congregation worshiped in that building until it succumbed to fire in 1926. In 1927, a joint coalition of influential African-American and white community members rebuilt the church. The third church building was completed in 1929. Designed by Kingston architect Thomas P. Rice, who constructed several municipal buildings, the church was brick and stone in early-20th Century, neo-Gothic style. [4]

The church is a three-bay-wide by seven-bay-deep, front-gabled brick building with a central square bell tower. The tower has four exposed paired faces with pointed-arched openings and louvers, At the top of the tower there is a cornice band and brick crenelation, giving it a distinctive, castle-like appearance. The bays flanking the front entrance each feature a large, rounded-arched window opening with Gothic-arched, tripartite lancets, yellow-colored stained-glass, all capped by a stone hood mold. The cornerstone (ca. 1927) is located near the base of the front, northwest corner of the church; Brick and concrete steps lead up to the main entrance positioned within the central tower bay. Above the entrance is a round-arched window with Gothic-arched tracery, capped by a stone hood mold and a stone inlay panel inscribed with the words, "A.M.E. Zion Church Est. 1848."

On March 3, 2021, the church building and associated Mount Zion Cemetery were added to the National Register of Historic Places. [1] [5]

History

African-American history in the region was intrinsically tied to the agrarian economy. During the Colonial period, the economy depended on Slave Labor, and the Dutch West India thousands of Africans were transported to the area. Prosperous Dutch and French Hugueno t farmers relied on African, Caribbean, South American, North American, and European trade networks for labor. As a result, many enslaved Africans and their descendants inherited Dutch, French Huguenot and British surnames. [6] These surnames (i.e. Cantine, DuBois, Hasbrouck, Tenbrouck, Vandemark, Van Dyke, Vanderzee etc.) are present in church history and at the AMEZ's Mount Zion Cemetery (ca. 1856). The cemetery is located in Kingston's Fifth Ward, and contains more than 104 marked graves, many of which were African-American veterans and influential members of the community. [7]

Later, the denomination was influential in abolitionist movement. Prominent members of the AME Zion was known as “the Freedom Church”, and the denomination included James Varick, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman and Sojourner Truth (Isabella Baumfree), raised in neighboring Esopus.

Notable people and contributions

Manformer pastors were influential in local, state, and national affairs. Reverend Jeremiah R.B. Smith (served from 1882 to 1887) was a member of the Star of Zion, wrote for many anti-slavery publications, and was a former soldier. [8] He was the first African-American chaplain of the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR). [9] Also, Rev. Dr. Stephen Conrad was featured by Life Magazine in 1938 for being the first African-American president of Peekskill's Minister's Association. [10] Later, during the Civil Rights Movement, several influential members (Everette C. Hodge and Leonard Van Dyke) were prominent local activists. [11] Van Dyke was the city's first African-American alderman and represented the Fourth Ward. [12]

In addition to religious services, the AME Zion Church of Kingston served as a meeting place for such clubs as the Boy Scouts, the black Elks Club (IPOEW), Odd Fellows, and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and later the Maria Coles Perkins Lawton Progressive Women's Club. The latter was a division of Empire State Federation of Women's Clubs (ESFWC), established in 1908 by M.C. Perkins Lawton. The ESFWC was the organization that provided support for Harriet Tubman until her death in 1913. [13] [14]

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References

  1. 1 2 SG 100006224 "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List 2021 03 05". National Park Service.
  2. "Cornerstone Lay at AME Zion Church". Kingston Daily Freeman . October 15, 1926. p. 7.
  3. Hood, James Walker (1895). One Hundred Years of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church; or, The Centennial of African Methodism. New York: A.M.E. Zion Book Concern. OCLC   216661.
  4. Rhoads, William B. (2003). Kingston, New York : the architectural guide. Catskill, New York: Black Dome Press. pp. 93–94. ISBN   978-1-883789-35-0.
  5. "State Historic Preservation Board Recommends 16 Nominations for State & National Registers of Historic Places". NYS SHPO. December 4, 2020. Archived from the original on January 16, 2021.
  6. Levine, David (January 18, 2017). "African American History: A Past Rooted in the Hudson Valley". Hudson Valley Magazine. Retrieved January 4, 2021.
  7. Diamond, Joseph E. (2006). "Owned in Life, Owned in Death: The Pine Street African and African-American BurialGround in Kingston, New York". Northeast Historical Archaeology. 35 (Article 22): 47–62. doi:10.22191/neha/vol35/iss1/22.
  8. Penn, Irvine Garland (1891). "Rev. Jeremiah R. B. Smith, Time Honored Afro-American Contributor". The Afro-American Press and Its Editors . Springfield, MA: Willey & Co. pp. 569–573.
  9. "The Grand Army Men Voting: The Struggle for Office in the Department of New York" . The New York Times. February 25, 1887.
  10. "White Pastors Elect Negro President". Life magazine. June 27, 1938. p. 60.(Title from Table of Contents, page 7.)
  11. "Everette Hodge". Kingston Daily Freeman. April 14, 1977.
  12. "City Elects First Negro Officeholder". Kingston Daily Freeman. November 7, 1963. Archived from the original on November 22, 2021.
  13. Empire State Federation of Women's Clubs, Inc. Records 1938-1991, Empire State Federation of Women’s Clubs, OCLC   122599411
  14. Humez, Jean M. (2003). Harriet Tubman: The Life and the Life Stories. Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press. p. 115. ISBN   9780299191238.