Dandeson Coates Crowther KBE (24 September 1844 - 5 January 1938) was a leader of the Anglican Church in West Africa. He was born in Sierra Leone. [2] He was a part of the Christian Missionary Society (CMS) in 1870 and titled as "Archdeacon" of the Niger Delta in 1876. [3] He is credited with initiating the "mass movement" towards Christianity in the 1870s and ultimately the first African secession from the Anglican Church when he founded the Niger Delta Pastorate. [3] He was ordained at Saint Mary's Parish Church by Samuel Ajayi Crowther. [2] Prior to this role, he was Senior Pastor in Bonny, Niger Delta. [2]
Dandeson Coates Crowther was the youngest son of Samuel Ajayi Crowther, who was the first African Anglican Bishop in Nigeria. [3] [4]
Crowther was educated in Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and England. He attended the Christian Missionary Society Grammar School located in Lagos, Nigeria in 1860. [5] He then relocated and attended the Christian Missionary Society College in Islington, London, graduating in 1863. [2] He received a Doctorate of Divinity in Lambeth in 1921. [5]
Crowther's journey as a missionary began in 1870 after he was ordained by his father. [2] On 19 June 1870, he became a deacon at Saint Mary's Parish Church in Islington, London. [2] He returned to the Niger Delta in 1871 to join the Christian Missionary Society Niger Mission. On 12 March 1871, he became a priest in Lagos, Nigeria. [2] He remained at Bonny Island, Rivers State, Nigeria until becoming Archdeacon of the Niger Delta in 1876. [5] He was Archdeacon, often called "venerable," of the Lower Niger and Delta stations, and led the Southern Nigeria Province of the Christian Missionary Society Mission. [5]
Crowther frequently travelled across continents, [5] utilizing shipping lines between Great Britain and West Africa, such as the Elder Dempster Line. [6] He constantly travelled between London and Nigeria, but when he got sick, he traveled to Freetown, Sierra Leone. [5]
Crowther struggled throughout his mission as some of the leaders of the Christian Missionary Society did not want any non-native Europeans to run the Mission. The backlash against African-born clergymen skyrocketed after the Niger Crisis of 1890 [4] and led to the death of Samuel Ajayi Crowther in 1891. [4] Letters written by Dandeson Coates Crowther express his realization of people attempting to kick him out of the Christian Missionary Society. [7] He concluded his role as Archdeacon of the Niger Delta in 1926. [5] In 1935, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire, being knighted by the King of England, although as an ordained clergyman, he refrained from using the pre-nominal "Sir." [5] [8] He died on 5 January 1938 in Freetown, Sierra Leone. [5]
Crowther was involved in the Delta Revolt and often fought for Africans to run their continent without the sole reliance on Europeans. [2] The Niger Delta separated from the Christian Missionary Society after Crowther advocated for a self-governing African church, establishing the Niger Delta Pastorate in 1892. [3] He translated the Anglican Book of Common Prayer, "Dusk to Dusk," into Igbo. He also translated a portion of the book of Jeremiah of the Bible into Yoruba. [5]