Edward Jones (missionary)

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Edward Jones (1807-1865) was an African American missionary to the colony of Sierra Leone. Jones was a prominent missionary and figure in the colony of Sierra Leone; he was the first naturalized citizen of Sierra Leone (though he retained his American citizenship). Jones served was the first principal of Fourah Bay College and was also the first Black American to graduate from Amherst College in Massachusetts (http://www.amherst.edu/~rjyanco94/genealogy/acbiorecord/1826.html#jones-e). Jones was also the brother of Jehu Jones the prominent African American preacher.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Jones was born in Charleston, South Carolina and was a member of the mulatto elite of that area. The free mulattos were freed slaves who had fought in the American Revolutionary War for the Patriots and were freed for their loyalty. Edward Jones's father, Jehu Jones, was a wealthy free mulatto hotel owner who associated himself with the elite white people of Charleston and 'seldom kept the company of even light-complexioned free blacks and never of slaves'. Edward Jones was still proud of his African heritage and was a member of the Brown Fellowship society in Charleston.

[edit] Immigration to Liberia

Jones immigrated to Liberia but did not stay long before immigrating to the colony of Freetown, Sierra Leone (http://www.amherst.edu/~rjyanco94/genealogy/acbiorecord/1826.html#jones-e).

[edit] Life in Sierra Leone

It is in Sierra Leone that Jones is most remembered as a great leader and one of the patriarchs of a prominent Krio family. Jones was a superintendent of the Liberated African village of Kent, Sierra Leone and it was there he met one of the Nova Scotian settlers, Hannah Nylander, and married her. Jones had married into a promient family; his wife was half Nova Scotian (Black Loyalist descent making her of Black American descent also) and also half German through her missionary father Gustav Nylander. In all Jones married three times and buried all of his wives in Sierra Leone. Jones also had six children only one whom lived to adulthood.[1] Jones was also the first principal of the newly established Fourah Bay College in Fourah Bay, Sierra Leone (a suburb of Freetown). It was there that the only known portrait of Edward Jones was hung on the wall. Jones died in England in 1865.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Jehu Hanciles, Euthanasia of a Mission: African Church Autonomy in a Colonial Context (Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, ISBN 0275975703), pg. 96.

[edit] Sources