• Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
  • Map
  • Book
  • Prayer

Sacred Spaces of New England

Places that elicit contemplation, reflection and inspiration.

  • Connecticut
  • Maine
  • Massachusetts
  • New Hampshire
  • Rhode Island
  • Vermont

Massachusetts

The African Meeting House on Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts

Leave a Comment

Loading…

Click here to view the 360-degree panoramic image together with Google Cardboard and your iPhone, or to view it fullscreen on your iPhone.

The African Meeting House on Beacon Hill is the oldest African American extant church in the United States. Built in the Colonial style in 1806 largely by black laborers in the heart of Boston’s African American community, the meetinghouse was a magnet for the free and self-emancipated black community in the new republic’s formative years. The African Meeting House served as a center for the community as a church, school, and public space for celebrations, political and social reform meetings. Its walls hosted key figures in the Abolitionist Movement including William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, Maria Stewart, and Colonel Robert Gould Shaw. As the black community migrated to other neighborhoods in the late nineteenth century, the African Meeting House became a Jewish synagogue until 1972 when the Museum of African American History acquired it. Returned to its mid-nineteenth century appearance, the African Meeting House is a testament to black craftsmanship and a symbol for equality and freedom of speech.

46 Joy Street
Boston, MA 02114

Filed Under: Massachusetts Tagged With: Church, Colonial, Meetinghouse, Nondenominational

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Page 13

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to the Sacred Spaces of New England Newsletter:



Tags

Baptist Baroque Byzantine Byzantine Romanesque Carpenter Gothic Catholic Chapel Chautauqua Church Classical Revival Colonial Congregational English Gothic Episcopal Federal Style Georgian Gothic Revival Gothic Style Greek Revival High Victorian Gothic Islam Italianate Italian Renaissance Style Lutheran Meetinghouse Methodist Modern Mosque Multi-Denominational Multipurpose Muslim Nondenominational Orthodox Christianity Presbyterian Quaker Queen Anne Reform Judaism Richardsonian Romanesque Romanesque Romanesque Revival Secular Shingle Style Synagogue Unitarian Universalist Vernacular

Recent Additions

  • Saint Joseph Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Holy Trinity Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Saint George Greek Orthodox Cathedral, Manchester, New Hampshire
  • The First Church of Deerfield, Deerfield, Massachusetts
  • Uxbridge Friends Meetinghouse, Uxbridge, Massachusetts

Copyright © 2012–2025 - Seth Thompson