Browse By Migrations Geography Timeline Source Materials Education Materials Search
The Search for Work
< Going NorthThe Search for WorkThe Lives of Women >
First ImagePrevious ImageImage Gallery
view larger imageview larger image request a copy request a copy

Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, General Research and Reference Division

Henry Norval Jeter, Pastor Henry N. Jeter's Twenty-five Years Experience with the Shiloh Baptist Church and Her History (Providence, RI: Remington Printing Co., 1901)

Rev. Mahlon Van Horne

Despite racial prejudice and unfair practices that favored white laborers over black, some free people of color became successful business owners and craftsmen. And as communities expanded and built their own religious institutions, many church leaders became part of the elite black society, along with a small cadre of physicians, teachers, funeral parlor owners, and entrepreneurs. In 1885, Rev. Mahlon Van Horne (1840-1910), pastor of Union Congregational Church, became the first African American elected as a Representative to the State General Assembly of Rhode Island. He served three terms. In 1896 he was appointed Consul to St. Thomas, in the Danish West Indies. He later became a missionary in Antigua, where he died.

Hide indexing information
Image ID: 1157805
Title: Hon. Mahlon Van Horne.
Source: Pastor Henry N. Jeter's twenty-five years experience with the Shiloh Baptist Church and her history.
Name: Jeter, Henry N. (Henry Norval) (1851-1938) - Author
Published: 1901
Location: General Research and Reference Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
Subjects: African American abolitionists
African American Baptists
African Americans -- Rhode Island -- Newport

Keywords: Diplomats
Legislators
Men - United States
Ministers
Rhode Island
Union Congregational Church, Newport, Rhode Island
Van Horne, Mahlon
First ImagePrevious ImageImage Gallery
Home About Glossary The New York Public Library