Alexander Walters
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (March 2008) |
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2008) |
Bishop Alexander Walters (1858-1917) was an American clergyman and noted civil rights leader. Born a slave in Bardstown, Kentucky, just before the Civil War, he rose to become a bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church at age 33, then president of the National Afro-American Council, the nation’s largest civil rights organization, at age 40, serving in that post for most of the next decade. [1]
A commanding presence in the pulpit and a charismatic, eloquent orator, Walters was educated after the War in private schools, serving as valedictorian of his high school class in 1875. Within two years, he was licensed to preach by the A.M.E. Zion Quarterly Conference, serving pastorates in Indianapolis, Louisville, San Francisco, Portland, Oregon, Chattanooga, and Knoxville, Tennessee, before his assignment to Mother Zion Church in New York City in 1888.
In 1889, the Rev. Walters was selected to represent Zion Church in London at the World’s Sunday School Convention, and went on to visit other parts of Europe, Egypt, and the Holy Land. In May 1892, he was elected bishop of the Seventh District of the General Conference of the A.M.E. Zion Church, meeting in Pittsburgh.[2]
While in New York, he became acquainted with journalist Timothy Thomas Fortune, who was in the process of organizing his National Afro-American League, designed to protect African Americans against lynching and racial discrimination. Walters immediately endorsed the League, which met in early 1890 in Knoxville, but went defunct by 1893. In March 1898, alarmed by an upsurge in violent lynchings of African Americans across the country, Walters asked Fortune to publish a nationwide appeal for a meeting of African American leaders, signed by Walters. More than 150 leaders from across the country signed the call, which resulted in an organizational meeting in Rochester, New York, in September 1898, also attended by Susan B. Anthony and the widow of Frederick Douglass.
The new National Afro-American Council was intended to replicate the old League. Its constitution declared the Council nonpartisan in nature, and envisioned a structure of state and local councils, gathered together in annual meetings with delegates from affiliated organizations, schools, and newspapers, to protest against racial injustice and discrimination and to lobby for protective laws. Walters was elected the first president, while Fortune became the first chairman of the executive committee.
Beginning in Washington, D.C., in December 1898, the Council met in large cities around the country, attracting large audiences of African American journalists, clergymen, lawyers, educators, and community activists. Its officers included a wide range of influential African American men and women. The Council met in Chicago (1899), Indianapolis (1900), and Philadelphia (1901), each time reelecting Walters to the presidency and adopting outspoken, occasionally radical resolutions.
At the meeting in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in 1902, Walters stepped aside to become chairman of the executive committee, and Fortune, who had been first vice president, was elected president. A protégé of Booker T. Washington, Fortune began to steer the Council away from the independent course favored by Walters, and the Council soon slid into dormancy. Walters bided his time, regaining the presidency in Detroit in 1905, after issuing an appeal to old members to return. He was reelected at New York (1906) and Baltimore (1907), but the Council, now under the control of militant members of the Niagara Movement, gradually lost its cohesiveness and stability.
In 1908, Walters refused an offer by W. E. B. Du Bois to merge the Council with the Niagara Movement and two other organizations. Walters angered many black followers by endorsing Democratic presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan in 1908. The Council soon dissolved, but Walters wasted little time seeking a new power base, emerging as president of the new National Independent Political league. In the 1910s, he became a member of both the new National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the National Urban League. Walters traveled abroad frequently, including frequent trips to London, where he attended the Pan-African Conference in 1900, and visited West Africa in 1910 and the Caribbean in 1911. A well-respected figure internationally, he declined an offer in 1915 by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson to become U.S. minister to Liberia. Walters died on February 2, 1917, of natural causes. [3]
Walters was married three times, and had six children. His first wife, Katie Knox Walters, died in 1896; his second wife, Emeline Virginia Byrd Walters, died in 1902. He was survived by his third wife, Lelia Coleman Walters. He is buried in Brooklyn, New York, in Mother Zion’s Cypress Hill Cemetery.[4]
Footnotes: 1. Fleming, "Alexander Walters," in Dictionary of American Negro Biography.
2. Fleming, "Alexander Walters," in Dictionary of American Negro Biography.
3. Fleming, "Alexander Walters," in Dictionary of American Negro Biography.
4. Fleming, "Alexander Walters," in Dictionary of American Negro Biography.
[edit] References
- ^ Fleming, "Alexander Walters," in Dictionary of American Negro Biography
- ^ Fleming, "Alexander Walters," in Dictionary of American Negro Biography
- ^ Fleming, "Alexander Walters," in Dictionary of American Negro Biography
- ^ Fleming, "Alexander Walters," in Dictionary of American Negro Biography
- John E. Fleming, “Alexander Walters,” in Dictionary of American Negro Biography, ed. by Rayford W. Logan and Michael W. Winston (New York: W.W. Norton, 1982).
- Alexander Walters, My Life and Work (New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1917)