James W.C. Pennington
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- For the modern musician, see James Pennington.
James W.C. Pennington (1809 - 1870), an African American orator, minister, and abolitionist.
Pennington was born a slave in Washington County, Maryland. After escaping to Littlestown, Pennsylvania, Pennington moved to New York in 1828. A blacksmith by trade, he settled in New Haven, Connecticut, and audited classes at Yale Divinity School from 1834 to 1839 - becoming the first black man to attend classes at Yale. He was subsequently ordained and became a teacher, abolitionist, and author.
He wrote The Origin and History of the Colored People in 1841, which has been called the first history of African Americans, and a slave narrative in 1850, The Fugitive Blacksmith.
In 1849 the University of Heidelberg awarded him an honorary doctorate of divinity.
[edit] References
- Yale Alumni Magazine, January/February 2006, Vol LXIX, No. 3."Pioneers" by Judith Ann Schiff
↓==External links==
- Biography: James W.C. Pennington
- Spartacus Educational: James W.C. Pennington
- Works by James W. C. Pennington at Project Gutenberg