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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Frederick_Asbury_Cullen
rdf:type
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Frederick Asbury Cullen
rdfs:comment
The Reverend Frederick Asbury (F.A.) Cullen (c. 1868 – May 25, 1946) was an Methodist minister, community and civil rights activist based in Harlem, New York City. He supported legal and social protests, and was influential in working with the youth of his community. His parents were Isaac and Emmeline Williams Cullen. They had both been slaves. He served as President of the Harlem branch of the NAACP. Notably, he served as Vice President for the historic 1917 Negro Silent Protest Parade.
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Frederick Asbury Cullen
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Frederick Asbury Cullen
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n12:F.A._Cullen,_c.1920.png
dbo:birthPlace
dbr:Fairmount,_Maryland
dbo:deathDate
1946-05-25
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dbr:Fairmount,_Maryland
dct:subject
dbc:Activists_for_African-American_civil_rights dbc:1868_births dbc:African-American_history_between_emancipation_and_the_civil_rights_movement dbc:African-American_history_in_New_York_City dbc:1946_deaths dbc:American_humanitarians dbc:Clergy_from_New_York_City dbc:American_human_rights_activists dbc:NAACP_activists
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n12:F.A._Cullen,_c.1920.png?width=300
dbp:caption
c.1920
dbp:deathDate
1946-05-25
dbp:occupation
Methodist Episcopal Minister
dbo:abstract
The Reverend Frederick Asbury (F.A.) Cullen (c. 1868 – May 25, 1946) was an Methodist minister, community and civil rights activist based in Harlem, New York City. He supported legal and social protests, and was influential in working with the youth of his community. His parents were Isaac and Emmeline Williams Cullen. They had both been slaves. It is said that his religious awakening occurred at Baltimore's Sharp Street Methodist Episcopal Church, in September 1894. He was ordained as a Methodist minister in 1900 in Delaware County, Maryland.(The Methodist Episcopal Church was the forerunner of the Methodist Church (1939) and the United Methodist Church (1968).) He successfully led a two church circuit in Catlin, Maryland from 1900 to 1902. Later, he was assigned to St. Mark's Church, a congregation of mostly Black parishioners in New York's East Village. The church had a storefront mission in Harlem, Salem Chapel. He reached out to children as a means of getting their parents involved in the church. His success in recruiting led to the mission being elevated to an independent entity in 1908, becoming the . He led this church for 40 years. He served as President of the Harlem branch of the NAACP. Notably, he served as Vice President for the historic 1917 Negro Silent Protest Parade. Sometime before 1919, he married Carolyn Belle Mitchell (d. 1932), a soprano and pianist from Baltimore. They worked together in the Church. They had one unofficially adopted child, Countee LeRoy Porter, who assumed the Reverend's last name. Countee Cullen was a poet, and is regarded as a notable member of the Harlem Renaissance.
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4293
dbo:birthYear
1868-01-01
dbo:deathYear
1946-01-01
dbo:occupation
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