African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church (1866 - Unknown) - Religious Group
Religious Family: MethodistReligious Tradition: Unclassified
Description: The African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church is a predominantly black church formed in 1866 from the merging of part of the Union Church of Africans (then the African Union Church) with the First Colored Methodist Protestant Church. It was one of the two churches that emerged around 1865-6 from what had been the Union Church of Africans. The church is congregationally structured with a quadrennial general conference.
Official Site: Not available
Interactive Timeline: Methodist Family Interactive Timeline
Connections: African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church
Group (Active) | Group (Defunct) | Other |
African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church, Members (1940 - 1970)1
African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church, Ministers & Churches (1940 - 1970)1
African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church, Trends (1940 - 1970)1
YEAR | MEMBERS | MINISTERS | CHURCHES |
---|---|---|---|
1940 | 2,045 | 37 | |
1942 | 2,379 | 38 | |
1944 | 2,597 | 36 | |
1946 | 2,504 | 41 | |
1950 | 2,504 | 41 | |
1953 | 5,000 | 40 | 33 |
1968 | 8,000 | 48 | 41 |
1969 | 10,500 | 44 | 40 |
1970 | 8,000 | 48 | 41 |
Sources
1 All data on clergy, members, and churches are taken from the National Council of Churches’ Historic Archive CD and recent print editions of the Council’s Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches. The CD archives all 68 editions of the Yearbook (formerly called Yearbook of the Churches and Yearbook of American Churches) from 1916 to 2000. Read more information on the Historic Archive CD and the Yearbook.
Membership figures are "inclusive." According to the Yearbook, this includes "those who are full communicant or confirmed members plus other members baptized, non-confirmed or non-communicant." Each denomination has its own criteria for membership.
When a denomination listed on the Historic Archive CD was difficult to identify, particularly in early editions of the Yearbook, the ARDA staff consulted numerous sources, including Melton’s Encyclopedia of American Religions and the Handbook of Denominations in the United States. In some cases, ARDA staff consulted the denomination’s website or contacted its offices by phone. When a denomination could not be positively identified, its data were omitted.