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Mother Emanuel
Charleston, SC

Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church is the oldest AME
church in the south. It is referred to as "Mother Emanuel". Emanuel
has one of the largest and oldest black congregations south of
Baltimore, MD.
"Mother Emanuel" A.M.E. Church History
The history of
Emanuel AME Church reflects the development of religious
institutions for African Americans in Charleston. Dating back to the
fall of 1787 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Richard Allen founded
the Free African Society, adhering to the Doctrines of Methodism
established by John Wesley. In 1816, black members of Charleston's
Methodist Episcopal Church withdrew over disputed burial ground,
under the leadership of Morris Brown. The Rev. Morris Brown
organized a church of persons of color and sought to have it
affiliated with Allen's church. Three churches arose under the Free
African Society and were named the "Bethel Circuit". One of the
Circuit churches was located in the suburbs of Ansonborough,
Hampstead, and Cow Alley, now known as Philadelphia Alley in the
French Quarters of Charleston. Emanuel's congregation grew out of
the Hampstead Church, located at Reid and Hanover Streets.
In
1822 the church was investigated for its involvement with a planned
slave revolt. Denmark Vesey, one of the church's founders, organized
a major slave uprising in Charleston. Vesey was raised in slavery in
the Virgin Islands among newly imported Africans. He was the
personal servant of slave trader Captain Joseph Vesey, who settled
in Charleston in 1783. Beginning in December 1821, Vesey began to
organize a slave rebellion, but authorities were informed of the
plot before it could take place. The plot created mass hysteria
throughout the Carolinas and the South. Brown, suspected but never
convicted of knowledge of the plot, went north to Philadelphia where
he eventually became the second bishop of the AME denomination.
During
the Vesey controversy, the AME church was burned. Worship services
continued after the church was rebuilt until 1834 when all-black
churches were outlawed. The congregation continued the tradition of
the African church by worshipping underground until 1865 when it was
formally reorganized, and the name Emanuel was adopted, meaning "God
with us". The wooden two-story church that was built on the present
site in 1872 was destroyed by the devastating earthquake of August
31, 1886. The present edifice was completed in 1891 under the
pastorate of the Rev. L. Ruffin Nichols. The magnificent brick
structure with encircling marble panels were restored, redecorated
and stuccoed during the years of 1949-51 under the leadership of the
Rev. Frank R. Veal. The bodies of the Rev. Nichols and his wife were
exhumed and entombed in the base of the steeple so that they may
forever be with the Emanuel that they helped to nurture.
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