Black Protestants in a Catholic Land. The AME Church in the Dominican Republic 1899–1916

Black Protestants in a Catholic Land. The AME Church in the Dominican Republic 1899–1916

Christina Cecelia Davidson

Published : 2021-06-03

Section : Scientific articles

Abstract

The African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church, a black church founded in the United States in 1816, was first established in eastern Haiti when over 6,000 black freemen emigrated from the United States to Hispaniola between 1824 and 1825. Almost a century later, the AME Church grew rapidly in the Dominican Republic as West Indians migrated to the Dominican southeast to work on sugar plantations. This article examines the links between African-American immigrant descendants, West Indians, and U.S.-based AME leaders between the years 1899–1916. In focusing on Afro-diasporic exchange in the Church and the hardships missionary leaders faced on the island, the article reveals the unequal power relations in the AME Church, demonstrates the significance of the southeast to Dominican AME history, and brings the Dominican Republic into larger discussions of Afro-diasporic exchange in the circum-Caribbean.

Dominican Republic, Protestantism, Blacks, Migrants, Missionaries, United States, History

How to Cite

Davidson, C. C. . (2021). Black Protestants in a Catholic Land. The AME Church in the Dominican Republic 1899–1916: Black Protestants in a Catholic Land. The AME Church in the Dominican Republic 1899–1916. Revista Estudios Sociales, 43(162), 75–122. Retrieved from https://estudiossociales.bono.edu.do/index.php/es/article/view/973