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・ First Baptist Church (Minneapolis)
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First Baptist Church (Petersburg, Virginia)
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・ First Baptist Church (Poughkeepsie, New York)
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First Baptist Church (Petersburg, Virginia) : ウィキペディア英語版
First Baptist Church (Petersburg, Virginia)

First Baptist Church (est. 1774) was the first Baptist church in Petersburg, Virginia;〔(Albert J. Raboteau, ''Slave Religion: The 'Invisible Institution' in the Antebellum South'' ), Oxford University Press, p. 137, accessed 27 Dec 2008〕 one of the first African-American Baptist congregations in the United States, and one of the oldest black churches in the nation.〔(Henry Chase, "Proud, free and black: Petersburg - visiting the Virginia location of the largest number of 19th century free slaves" ), ''American Visions'', Jun-Jul 1994, accessed 27 Dec 2008〕 It established one of the first local schools for black children in the nation.
Its congregation was active during the 20th century Civil Rights Movement. Today it has the largest community outreach program in the city.
==History==
In the earliest decades of the Baptist Church in the Southeast, it was influenced by preachers from New England who generated the Great Awakening. As more churches were started, members came together in an association. With growth, in 1781 the association of churches split into two parts along state lines for Virginia and North Carolina. The twenty-one congregations in Virginia formed the Portsmouth Baptist Association, named after their first meeting place. Representatives worked together to form church policy. From 1810 to 1828 they began to work on Foreign Missions and Christian Education. Later they established Sabbath Schools.〔( "History of the Portsmouth Baptist Association" ), Official website, accessed 31 Dec 2008〕
The history of First Baptist Church started with scattered black members in Prince George County worshipping as New Lights in 1756 after the Great Awakening. Baptist preachers had traveled widely in the South where they appealed to both blacks and whites in evangelical outreach. In the early years, such preachers strongly supported an anti-slavery message based on the equality of men made in God's image. Their democratic message and willingness to welcome blacks in active roles attracted many new members to the Baptists, despite the established role of the Anglican Church in Virginia. In some areas, energetic young men without many other opportunities were the ones to take up leadership roles as Baptist preachers and challenge the class system of the colony.
In 1774 some of the New Light members united under the Rev. John Michaels. Calling themselves the First African Baptist Church, they met in Lunenburg in a building on the plantation of Colonel William Byrd III. After their meetinghouse at the Byrd plantation was destroyed in a fire, in 1820 free members of the congregation moved into Petersburg, Virginia, where there was a growing free black community. (From about 300 free blacks in 1790, the community in Petersburg grew tenfold to 3,224 by 1860, when it was the largest free black population in the South.〔("National Register Nominations: Pocahontas Island Historic District" ), ''Heritage Matters'', Jan-Feb 2008, National Park Service, accessed 30 Dec 2008〕 In that year on the eve of the Civil War, there were about 6,000 enslaved African Americans and 9,000 whites in the city.)
With the move into Petersburg, the congregation took the name of First Baptist Church, and built their first church on Harrison Avenue (near the location of the current church.) This was one of two early black Baptist churches in the colonies before the American Revolutionary War; they were the first of that denomination to be established in Petersburg.〔
Emphasizing education, the First Baptist congregation also created one of the earliest local schools for black children in the nation. From its beginning, the congregation had been led by black pastors. In the wake of Nat Turner's slave rebellion in 1831, however, planters became so alarmed about the potential for religious messages to cause other revolts that they passed legislation in 1832 requiring that all black churches be led by white pastors.〔 The planters believed they could ensure control of the message that whites would deliver. This situation lasted until after the Civil War, when blacks took back control of their church.〔
By 1865 First Baptist had 1700 members. Rev. Leonard A. Black, author of ''The Life and Sufferings of Leonard Black, a Fugitive from Slavery,'' was pastor from 1873 to 1883, during which time the congregation grew to 3,600 members. The church soon joined a state convention of black Baptist churches, aided by the Consolidated American Baptist Convention, to escape the supervision of whites. This was the forerunner of the National Baptist Convention, USA. The congregation continued to grow after the war as freedmen came to Petersburg from outlying areas, and its members helped the rural migrants adjust to urban life.〔
The current church at 236 Harrison Avenue was built starting in 1870, after a fire burned the previous one. The congregation steadily added to the church, completing the steeple during Black's pastorate.〔( First Baptist Church Petersburg, Virginia ), Official website, accessed 27 Dec 2008〕〔(''The Life and Sufferings of Leonard Black, a Fugitive from Slavery. Written by Himself.'' ) New Bedford: Benjamin Lindsey, 1847.〕 In the late 1880s the pastor, Rev. Charles B. Gordon, also edited ''The Pilot'' (later known as ''The National Pilot''), a paper that was said to be a mouthpiece for Baptists in Virginia.〔("First Baptist Church, Petersburg, Virginia" ), African American Heritage-Virginia, accessed 31 Dec 2008〕

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