Ralph Randolph Gurley (May 26, 1797 – July 30, 1872) was a clergyman, an advocate of the separation of the races and a major force in the American Colonization Society, which offered passage to their colony in west Africa (now Liberia), to free black Americans.
He was born in Lebanon, Connecticut, and graduated from Yale College, B.A. in 1818. He moved to Washington, D.C. and was licensed to preach as a Presbyterian, but was never ordained. Nevertheless, he served as Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives[1] for the 21st and 22nd Congresses and again for the 30th and 31st, opening each day's proceedings with a prayer. From 1822 till 1872 he acted as the agent and secretary of the American Colonization Society. In the will of ex-President James Madison, $2000 was bequeathed through Gurley to the Society [1]. Gurley visited Africa three times in the Society's interests, and was one of the founders of Liberia, which he named. He also went to England to solicit aid in the work of colonization, always expressing the highest motives:
During the first ten years of his agency the annual income of the society increased from $778 to $40,000. He travelled widely to deliver addresses in its behalf, edited its public-relations organ The African Repository and Colonial Journal and wrote a Life of Jehudi Ashmun (1835), a secretary of the Society, reported his Mission to England for the American Colonization Society (1841) and an encomium, the Life and Eloquence of Reverend Sylvester Larned (1844).
In his biography of Ashmun (1835), Gurley wrote
Religious titles | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Reuben Post |
Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives December 6, 1830 – December 5, 1831 |
Succeeded by Reuben Post |
Preceded by William T.S. Sprole |
Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives December 6, 1847 – December 1, 1851 |
Succeeded by Lyttleton Morgan |