Lewis Woodson
Lewis Woodson was an educator, minister, writer, and abolitionist. He was an early leader in the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Woodson started and helped to build other institutions within the free African-American communities in Ohio and western Pennsylvania prior to the American Civil War.
Woodson was among the original 24 trustees to found Wilberforce University in Ohio in 1856, in a collaboration between the AME and the Cincinnati Methodist Council. When the college faced financial difficulties during the American Civil War, the AME Church bought it from the Methodist Church in 1863, making it the first historically black college to be owned and operated by African Americans.
Birth and early life
Lewis Woodson was the oldest of eleven children born to Thomas and Jemima Woodson. Both parents were mixed-race. Both parents had been born into slavery and both effectuated their freedom, Thomas while still a teenager. Lewis was born in January 1806 in Greenbrier County, Virginia.According to oral history, Thomas left Monticello in his early teenage years. He became an orphan, but, fortunately, a free orphan. It is uncertain how and where he met Jemima. It is reasonable to think that had he married a girl younger than himself, say thirteen, the couple would have been unprepared to face the future. Jemima was older than Thomas and Jemima came with an unmarried mother, who, in a fashion, likely served as Thomas' surrogate mother. Jemima also had a resourceful older sister and with her a brother-in-law, Lewis Leach. Thomas and Jemima's first child, Lewis, was named after his uncle.
Woodson family oral history, dating to the early nineteenth century, has claimed that Thomas Woodson was the eldest child of Sally Hemings and her master President Thomas Jefferson. That account has been disputed by Jeffersonian historians. Birth certificates were not common until 100 years after Thomas Woodson was born and they were never issued for the birth of slave children. There is no surviving record of Sally Hemings' having given birth to a surviving child before 1795. Professional historians have ignored the erasure of a name of a male slave born in 1790, written into Jefferson's Farm Book by Thomas Jefferson. One letter of the name of the mother of the child survived the erasure. Historians also ignore the newspaper articles of James Callender and others in 1802. Thomas Woodson was not named Thomas Woodson at birth. Slaves usually did not have a surname.
The Woodson family is a black American family. Its history and efficacy has been under attack for over 30 years. The Jefferson-Hemings controversy Wikipedia page and the Sally Hemings Wikipedia page are dominated, not as a matter of design or intent, on the part of the Wikipedia organization, but as a matter of practice and reality, by individuals who have the same mindset as Mississippi-born Pulitzer-prize winning historian Dumas Malone, who successfully prevented a Sally Hemings movie from being produced in his lifetime. They have erased from those Wikipedia pages anything and everything they did not like. The idea that all Americans have equal access to free speech is 100% fictional, because many institutions and business allow mob rule to dominate without boundaries.
In addition, results of a 1998 Jefferson DNA study conclusively showed that there was no genetic link between the Jefferson male line and the Woodson male line. The study's major findings were that the Y chromosome of the Jefferson male line matched that of Sally Hemings' son Eston's descendant. The Woodson Y chromosome did show northern European ancestry. The body of the 3rd President, Thomas Jefferson, was not exhumed, thus his DNA was not tested.
Move to Ohio and later to Pittsburgh
The Woodson family moved from Virginia to Chillicothe, Ohio about 1821. Chillicothe had a strong community of numerous free blacks; it was a center of abolitionist activity. Soon the Woodsons helped establish an African Methodist Episcopal congregation there, the first west of the Allegheny Mountains.In 1829 Thomas Woodson acquired a 50-acre farm in Jackson County, Ohio, which he grew over time to 382 acres. He had a large herd of cattle, hogs, and "fine horses." He must have come to Ohio with a stake, otherwise he is made out to be a genius or a miracle worker; he was neither. Nor did he win the lottery or inherit money, while living as an orphan. The best speculation is that the Hemings family 'misappropriated' cattle and horses from Jefferson's Bedford plantation, taking them to Greenbrier County and Thomas skillfully grew a herd from there. The word Jefferson used for unsanctioned liberties taken by the Hemings family was 'mismanagement.' Lewis Woodson moved with his wife and children to Pittsburgh in 1830/31. He remained connected to his family in Ohio.
Lewis and two brothers, Thomas and John, became ministers in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, a new, independent, African-American denomination started in Philadelphia in 1816. The Woodsons helped establish new congregations in what was then thought of as the western United States.
Marriage and family
In Chillicothe, Lewis Woodson married Caroline Robinson, also born in Virginia. The Woodsons had ten surviving children, many of whom followed their models in gaining education and contributing to their communities. One of the ten Woodson children married a member of the Tanner family and another married a member of the Highgate family, who had lived in Pennsylvania since well before the American Revolution as free black Americans.A son of Lewis and Caroline Woodson, Granville S. Woodson served on the Executive Committee of the National Equal Rights League. Their grandson George Frederick Woodson earned degrees from Drew University and Morris Brown University. He served as Dean of the Payne Theological Seminary at Wilberforce for over three decades, ending in 1937. Their grandson Howard D. Woodson earned a degree in civil engineering from what is now the University of Pittsburgh in 1899. He contributed to the design of Union Station in Washington, D.C., and also became a civic activist. H.D. Woodson High School is named in his honor.
Greenwood-Praeger published a highly acclaimed non-fiction best seller in 2001, written by a great-great grandson of Lewis and Carline Woodson. C- Span aired this video of one of the author's presentations. The book covered Woodson family genealogy and history.
https://www.c-span.org/video/?165070-1/a-president-family
A great-great-great grandson of Lewis and Carline Woodson, Timothy K. Lewis, became a United States District Judge in Pittsburgh in 1991 and became a United States Circuit Judge in 1992.
AME conferences
Freedom's Journal, was the first widely distributed black American newspaper. It operated for only two years March 1827 to March 1829. The newspaper printed one letter each from Richard Allen, founder of the African Methodist Episcopal church, and Rev. Lewis Woodson of the same denomination. Both letters denounced proposals for expatriation or removal of black Americans to Africa, as supported by the American Colonization Society. Woodson advocated colonization in separate black communities in the United States as an alternative.Reverend Lewis Woodson served as secretary for an AME Conference in Hillsborough, Ohio while Bishop Morris Brown presided. The riots of 1829 in Cincinnati had driven out much of the African-American population. Labor competition had led to whites' attacking blacks, who had been establishing a thriving free black community. Nearly 1200 blacks left Cincinnati for Canada as a result.
In Pittsburgh, Woodson joined with John B. Vashon to establish the African Education Society. One of the students in Woodson's school was George Boyer Vashon, who was taught by Woodson until black students were allowed to attend publicly financed schools. George Vashon was the first African American to graduate from Oberlin College. Oberlin graduated 23 blacks before the Civil War, making a significant contribution to the uplift of the Antebellum African American community. Martin Delany was also one of Woodson's students. Woodsn's one teacher school was one of the first to be operated by an African American. As Secretary to the AME Ohio Conference of 1833, Woodson advanced a resolution urging the AME to establish or assist "...common schools, Sunday Schools and temperance societies..." It was the first such resolution to urge the AME denomination to support education. Lewis Woodson filled a key role in the establishment of the Third, or Ohio District, of the AME denomination. The AME Church founded Union Seminary near Columbus, Ohio in 1847.
A few years after arriving in Pittsburgh, Lewis Woodson opened a barbershop. He operated the business at the same time he pursued his ministry and major civic interests. Vashon and Woodson befriended the young Martin Delany, and acted as his teachers and mentors. Delany became a spokesman for blacks during the Civil War and helped them to be accepted as soldiers on the Union side.
In 1837 Lewis Woodson served as secretary for a group of African Americans who created the "Pittsburgh Memorial", a document asserting that free blacks should retain the voting right in Pennsylvania. Following Nat Turner's Rebellion in 1831 in Virginia and the growth of the free population in Pennsylvania, fears contributed to support among whites to restrict the rights of free blacks. While the legislature deprived free blacks of the right to vote in the Commonwealth for some years, Woodson was instrumental in securing public funding for black education. He joined the Western District of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society and worked for abolition.
"Augustine" and the Father of Black nationalism
The historian Floyd Miller documented that Woodson wrote under the pen name "Augustine". Miller suggested that in this role, Woodson could be called the "Father of Black Nationalism". From 1837 to 1841, Woodson published numerous letters as "Augustine" in The Colored American newspaper. He advocated black initiatives to create institutions independent of whites, including churches, newspapers, and schools. Woodson advocated preparation for the time when the multitudes of American slaves would gain freedom, and require social, organizational, and other assistance.Woodson attended and organized national and state conventions of black American abolitionists. He attended at least one national convention and spoke there. He helped to organize and lead conventions targeted toward Pennsylvania. One such convention took place in Pittsburgh in August 1841. John B. Vashon and Rev. Samuel Williams also served on the organizing committee for that convention. Woodson also served as one of the secretaries for that convention. He attended conventions where black and white abolitionists gathered, including one in Cincinnati in 1850.
Lewis Woodson engaged in debates and ideological clashes with other black American leaders. Woodson joined the American Moral Reform Society, but his contribution was that of dissent. AMRS leader William Whipper vehemently opposed the naming of and constitution of organizations and churches on the basis of color and race. Whipper, for instance, did not approve of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the church to which Reverend Woodson was attached. The letters Woodson wrote to the Colored American newspaper were, in part, meant to oppose Whipper's views. Woodson clashed with Frederick Douglass because of Woodson's opposition to Garrisonism. Douglass sent a scathing letter to The Anti-Slavery Bugle wherein Douglass likened Woodson to "Judas Iscariot." The letter was written before Douglass' split with William Lloyd Garrison was complete. Said another way, after the Douglass/Woodson clash, Douglass' stance came closer to Woodson's.
David Walker's Appeal is a maze of sometimes conflicting ideological statements. Douglass not only started his own newspaper, but changed his stance and split away for Garrison's ideology. Delany promoted the emigration of black Americans, but did not himself emigrate. Part of Woodson's mark is that he was unwavering; the ideological stances he adopted over 40 years of activism did not change. Woodson never called for a slave uprising, he never supported black American emigration to Africa, and he never supported Garrisonism. It would be a stretch, of course, to claim that the black American ethnicity followed Woodson, directly, even though his stance and the collective paths of the majority of black Americans was, over time, consistent.