- Amos Noë Freeman
Amos Noë Freeman (1809—1893) was an Black American abolitionist, Presbyterian minister and educator.
Early life
Freeman was a born in
Rahway, New Jersey , and was orphaned and raised within the church from an early age. As a child, he was sent to attend theAfrican Free School inManhattan , then matriculated toPhoenix High School inNew York City , established by his mentor, Rev.Thedore Sedgwick Wright . Freeman returned to his native New Jersey to attend Rahway Academy, and later transferred toOneida Institute in Whitesboro, which was recently founded by radical Presbyterian minister, Rev.Beriah Green . Upon graduating from Oneida Institute in the early 1830s, Freeman moved back toNew Jersey , first to New Brunswick, then Newark to teach in theColored public schools.In 1839 in Newark, Freeman married Christiana Taylor Williams (1812-1903), a recently manumitted domestic worker and a black scion of the aristocratic Livingston family of New York.
Ministry
Freeman was ordained as a minister by the New York Presbytery in 1840. By 1841, he and his wife had moved to
Portland, Maine , where he was installed as the pastor of theAbyssinian Congregational Church . In 1852, Rev. Freeman became thepastor ofSiloam Presbyterian Church , where he was the minister from 1852 to 1860.While Rev. Freeman lived in
Brooklyn in the mid-1850s, he secretedAnna Maria Weems , a young girl fleeingslavery , by disguising her as a boy and personally delivering her to freedom inOntario ,Canada . It is likely there where he met radical abolitionist, John Brown, who later stayed at the Freeman home in Brooklyn en route to his raid in Harpers Ferry,Virginia in 1859.Later years
In 1860, the Freemans moved to Hartford,
Connecticut , where Rev. Freeman was installed as pastor of the Congregationalist Talcott Street Church. Rev. Freeman and family returned to Brooklyn in 1864 to rejoin his congregation atSiloam Presbyterian Church , where he stayed until his retirement in 1885. He died at his home in Brooklyn.
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