A major reformer and intellectual, Alexander Crummell (1819–1898) was the first black American to graduate from Cambridge University. From 1858 to 1872, he lived in Liberia, where he worked as a farmer, educator, and Episcopal missionary. Returning to America, he established St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Washington D.C., serving as its pastor until 1894. In 1897 he founded the American Negro Academy, which he intended as a challenge to the accommodationist philosophy of Booker T. Washington.
A prolific writer, Crummell produced pioneering works on black nationalism, black self-determination, and Pan Africanism that influenced W.E.B. Du Bois and other African-American leaders of the time. His surviving papers include over four hundred sermons and political essays and a voluminous correspondence.
Yet despite his importance to American and African-American history, Crummell is little known today, and there have been virtually no modern printings of his writing. This volume is intended to restore Crummell's voice and to prompt a reevaluation of his work.
