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The Times Were Strange And Stirring
Reginald Francis Hildebrand

The Times Were Strange And Stirring

Methodist preachers and the crisis of emancipation

Duke University Press (1995)
9780822316398
189 pages
Dewey 287/.875/09034
LC Classification BX8435 .H55 1995
LC Control No. 94046758

Genre

  • Black Hist

Subject

  • African American Methodists - History - Southern States
  • Methodist Church - History - Southern States
  • Southern States - Church History

Plot

With the conclusion of the Civil War, the beginnings of Reconstruction, and the realities of emancipation, former slaves were confronted with the possibility of freedom and, with it, a new way of life. In The Times Were Strange and Stirring, Reginald F. Hildebrand examines the role of the Methodist Church in the process of emancipation—and in shaping a new world at a unique moment in American, African American, and Methodist history.Hildebrand explores the ideas and ideals of missionaries from several branches of Methodism—the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church, and the northern-based Methodist Episcopal Church—and the significant and highly charged battle waged between them over the challenge and meaning of freedom. He traces the various strategies and goals pursued by these competing visions and develops a typology of some of the ways in which emancipation was approached and understood.Focusing on individual church leaders such as Lucius H. Holsey, Richard Harvey Cain, and Gilbert Haven, and with the benefit of extensive research in church archives and newspapers, Hildebrand tells the dramatic and sometimes moving story of how missionaries labored to organize their denominations in the black South, and of how they were overwhelmed at times by the struggles of freedom.

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Added Date Dec 16, 2017 18:03:14
Modified Date Sep 17, 2018 16:02:25