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Civil Rights activist Jermain Wesley Loguen is born.
1813 (Feb 5)
Jermain Wesley Loguen was born in Davidson County, Tennessee. His mother, Cherry, was born free in Ohio, kidnapped, and sold to David Logue, who fathered Jermain. Logue sold Jermain and his mother to a brutal enslaver. After witnessing the constant whipping of his mother, the murder of an enslaved Black, and the sale of his sister, Loguen sought his freedom. With the help of quakers, Loguen escaped on the underground railroad to Hamilton, Ontario, where he learned to read and worked as a lumberjack and farmer. He later settled in central New York. After opening a school for Black children in Utica, Loguen and his wife moved to Syracuse, where he opened another school and managed the underground railroad station there. In 1842, he was ordained a minister of the New York Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and went on to establish several churches between 1840 and 1850. He worked closely with Frederick Douglass on the underground railroad, and he wrote for Douglass's North Star and Frederick Douglass' paper. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 threatened the freedom of Loguen and other runaways, so in 1851 he escaped to Canada. Upon returning to Syracuse, he continued his work with the underground railroad, helping some 1,500 of the enslaved escape, including Harriet Tubman, who stayed at his home. He was twice elected bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and was about to begin mission work on the west coast when he died in 1872.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.