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Eli Baptist

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Eli Baptist
Born1820 (1820)
Cumberland, Pennsylvania, United States
DiedMay 26, 1905 (aged 84–85)

Eli Baptist (1820 - May 26, 1905)[1][2]: 180  was an American abolitionist and a leader of the African-American community in Springfield, Massachusetts.

Life

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Baptist was born free in Cumberland, Pennsylvania.[2]: 180  He moved to Springfield, Massachusetts around 1846, where he worked first at a window blind factory and then, following the factory's closure, as a peddler of soap and candles.[2]: 180 [3]: 40 

He became an associate of abolitionist John Brown after he moved to Springfield in 1847.[4]: 10  In 1851, Baptist may have become a member of the League of Gileadites, a group in part founded by Brown to resist the Fugitive Slave Act and protect Springfield's African-American community.[2]: 181 [3]: 40 

In 1860, Baptist decided to immigrate to Haiti alongside Perry and Ruth Cox Adams and the families of Henry Griffin and Henry Joseph James.[5]: 82  He returned to New York City in June 1864,[5]: 83  and from there returned to Springfield, after which point he became "one of the city's leading citizens".[2]: 180 

Baptist was a member of the Sanford Street Church (also called the Free Church and St. John's Congregational), and held a number of roles there over the years.[2]: 181 [4]: 10  In 1866, Baptist and Thomas Thomas founded the Union Mutual Beneficial Society and the Masonic Lodge in Springfield.[4]: 11  In 1884, the Massachusetts Governor gave Baptist a "justice of the peace commission".[2]: 181  In 1885, Baptist served as a pallbearer at the funeral of physician Jefferson Church, whose home in Springfield had served as an Underground Railroad stop.[3]: 29-30 

Baptist died on May 26, 1905, at age 85, from "the infirmities of age and an old case of Bright's disease".[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b The History of St. John's Congregational Church, Springfield, Massachusetts, 1844-1962. History Committee, St. John's Congregational Church. 1962. p. 131.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g McCarthy, Cliff (2022). "Who Were the Members of Springfield's League of Gileadites?" (PDF). 'Historical Journal of Massachusetts. 50 (1).
  3. ^ a b c Rocco, Louis J. Jr. (2020). "Full of Light and Fire": John Brown in Springfield (Thesis). University of Massachusetts Boston.
  4. ^ a b c Kazini, Imani (1977). "Black Springfield: A Historical Study". Contributions in Black Studies. 1: 5–14.
  5. ^ a b Carvalho, Joseph III (2012). "Uncovering the Stories of Black Families in Springfield and Hampden County, Massachusetts: 1650–1865" (PDF). Historical Journal of Massachusetts. 40 (1): 59–93.