An Online Reference Guide to African American History
Quintard Taylor
Scott and Dorothy Bullitt Professor of American History
University of Washington, Seattle
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Jermain Wesley Loguen was born on February 5, 1813 into slavery in Tennessee. His mother was owned by Loguen’s father and master. In 1834, Loguen escaped from bondage and fled to St. Catherine’s, Ontario where he stayed briefly before finding his way to Rochester, New York where, in 1837, he enrolled in Beriah Green’s Oneida Institute. By 1840, Loguen, now an African Methodist Episcopal Zion (AMEZ) minister, had married and moved to Syracuse to lead a church. Loguen stayed only briefly in Syracuse, New York before he spent three of the next few years at Bath, Maine and another two in Ithaca, New York serving as an AME Zion ministerSources:
Carol Hunter, To Set the Captives Free: Reverend Jermain Wesley Loguen
and the Struggle for Freedom in Central New York, 1835-1872 (New York:
Garland, 1993).
Contributor(s):
Engledew, Devin John
University of Washington
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