Jared Maurice Arter
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Jared Maurice Arter was born into slavery on Jan. 27, 1850 in Jefferson County, West Virginia. His father was Jeremiah Arter who was not very present in Jared’s life because of his slave status and his work in the mills in Jefferson County. When Jared was about seven, his father fell down some stairs at a mill and died after falling down some stairs and being paralyzed at a mill. Jared’s mother’s name was Hannah Frances Stephenson Arter. She was a slave who was thirty-eight years younger than Jared’s father.
Jared lived near Harpers Ferry during the early part of his life, and when he was nine, he witnessed the hanging of four of the abolitionist John Brown's men: Cook, Coppie, Green, and Stephens. A couple years after this, in the midst of the Civil War, Jared saw both Union and Confederate troops march past where he lived.
Under the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863, Jared’s family was freed from slavery. Shortly after being freed, Jared’s mother took most of the family, including Jared, to Washington, D. C. There a family was found for Jared by the name of Wealch where he stayed for short while.
In 1865, Jared’s mother got a proposition from a businessman from New York to educate her two older boys, on the condition that they would be bound to him until they were twenty-one. Jared jumped at the opportunity to get a good education, and spent the next several years working for the Ayer family and beginning his education. Even after leaving the Ayer residence, Jared continued his education for many years while working along the way. He attended Newfield and Ithaca, a private school in New York, Washington, D. C., Store College, Harper's Ferry. He received a PhD at Pennsylvania State College, and a BD at Hillsdale, Michigan, and Chicago Theological Seminary.
In 1873, Jared came to accept Christianity as his sole faith, and became a soldier of the cross. In 1887 he was ordained to the Gospel ministry, and was given work at Curtis Free Baptist Church. He married twice: once on July 10, 1890, to Miss Emily Carter, and once on December 29, 1910, to Miss Maggie Wall. In his first marriage he had five kids four of them died before they were twenty.
After getting an education himself, he devoted his life to educating others. He didn’t finish his own schooling until the spring of 1894. Though he loved teaching others about the Bible he also had a love of history, Biology, and literature of modern missions and Negro advancement. After being questioned on his views of human progress, he said, "Urge above all things else regenerated lives and loyalty to God, patriotism, true home building, economy, education, race consciousness and unceasing efforts to deserve and to secure all rights." Jared Maurice Arter is the author of the Slave Narrative, Echoes From a Pioneer Life.
At the time of his funeral a Dr. N. C. Brackett said, “If we had two or three William Arters in every community of this country the race problem would be settled.”