Baron Stow
Baron Alanson Stow
Baron Stow (1801–1869) was a Boston Baptist minister, writer and editor, who in 1843 with Samuel Francis Smith compiled a Baptist hymnal entitled: The Psalmist, which for the next thirty years was the most widely used Baptist Hymnal in the United States.[1]
Early life and education
Baron Stow was born June 16, 1801, in Croydon, New Hampshire and graduated in 1825 from Columbian College, now George Washington University in Washington, D.C.[1]
Ordained ministry
In 1827 Baron Stow was ordained a minister in a Baptist church in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He left there in 1832 to become pastor of the Baldwin Street Baptist Church in Boston. After 16 years, he left to become pastor of the Rowe Street Baptist Church, from which he retired in 1867.[1][2]
He married community activists Thomas Dalton and Lucy Lew Francis on June 5, 1834 at the Rowe Street Baptist Church in Boston.[3][4]
Death
Baron Stow died December 27, 1869, in Boston.[1]
References
Boston African American community prior to the Civil War |
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| | | Prominent individuals |
- Macon Bolling Allen (lawyer, judge)
- Crispus Attucks (killed during Boston Massacre)
- Leonard Black (minister, slave memoirist)
- John Coburn (abolitionist, soldier)
- Ellen and William Craft (slave memoirists, abolitionists)
- Rebecca Lee Crumpler (physician)
- Lucy Lew Dalton (abolitionist)
- Thomas Dalton (abolitionist)
- Hosea Easton (abolitionist, minister)
- Moses Grandy (abolitionist, slave memoirist)
- Leonard Grimes (abolitionist, minister)
- Primus Hall (abolitionist, Rev. War soldier)
- Prince Hall (freemason, abolitionist)
- Lewis Hayden (abolitionist, politician)
- John T. Hilton (abolitionist, author, businessman)
- Thomas James (minister)
- Barzillai Lew (Rev. War soldier)
- George Latimer (escaped slave)
- Walker Lewis (abolitionist)
- George Middleton (1735–1815) (Rev. War soldier, Freemason, activist)
- Robert Morris (lawyer, abolitionist, judge)
- William Cooper Nell (abolitionist, writer)
- Susan Paul (teacher, abolitionist, author)
- Thomas Paul (minister)
- John Stewart Rock (dentist, doctor, lawyer, abolitionist)
- John Brown Russwurm (college grad., teacher)
- John J. Smith (abolitionist, politician)
- Maria W. Stewart (abolitionist, public speaker, journalist)
- Baron Stow (minister)
- Samuel Snowden (minister, abolitionist)
- Edward G. Walker (abolitionist, lawyer, politician)
- David Walker (abolitionist)
- Phillis Wheatley (poet, author)
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