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Civil Rights activist Bishop Henry Turner dies in Windsor, Ontario.
1915 (May 8)
Black Pan-African leader and African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E) Church Bishop Henry McNeal Turner died in Windsor, Ontario. Turner was born free in Abbeville, South Carolina, in 1833. At an early age he was hired out to work in the field with the enslaved. Turner's first teachings came from a white playmate. Making his way to Baltimore at age fifteen, Turner worked as a messenger and a handyman at a medical school, where he had access to books and magazines. He educated himself there until an Episcopal bishop consented to teach him. This was one of the influences that led Turner into the church, where he became an A.M.E minister. During the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln appointed Turner as chaplain of the 54th Massachusetts Negro regiment. After the war, he worked with the Freedmen's Bureau in Georgia and became actively involved in republican politics. Turner served in the Georgia Constitutional Convention of 1868 and was elected to the state legislature. Turner vehemently opposed the successful attempt of white Georgia lawmakers to expel the Black Reconstruction legislators. These and other experiences convinced him that the Black man had no future in the United States. Turner became a colonizationist and Pan-Africanist. He was one of the sponsors of an ill-fated expedition of approximately two hundred Blacks to Liberia in 1878. In spite of the failure of this venture, Turner continued his support of colonization. Prior to his death in 1915, Turner also served as director of the A.M.E. publishing house, editor of denominational periodicals, and chancellor of Morris Brown College, an A.M.E. school in Atlanta.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.