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  1. Alexander Crummell (* 3. März 1819 in New York City; † 10. September 1898 in Red Bank, New Jersey) war ein afroamerikanischer Missionar der Anglikanischen Kirche in Liberia und Sierra Leone, Hochschullehrer in Monrovia und wird als Heiliger der Anglikanischen Kirche verehrt.

  2. Alexander Crummell (March 3, 1819 – September 10, 1898) was an American minister and academic. Ordained as an Episcopal priest in the United States, Crummell went to England in the late 1840s to raise money for his church by lecturing about American slavery.

  3. 6. Juni 2011 · Alexander Crummell (1819–1898) was the most prominent rationalist of the black American enlightenment thinkers in the nineteenth-century. He stands out among his contemporaries—Frederick Douglass, Anna Julia Cooper, Booker T. Washington, most notably—for his robust defense of the central place of reason in moral agency.

  4. Alexander Crummell (born 1819, New York, N.Y., U.S.—died Sept. 10/12, 1898, Point Pleasant?, N.J.) was an American scholar and Episcopalian minister, founder of the American Negro Academy (1897), the first major learned society for African Americans.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Alexander Crummell war ein afroamerikanischer Missionar der Anglikanischen Kirche in Liberia und Sierra Leone, Hochschullehrer in Monrovia und wird als Heiliger der Anglikanischen Kirche verehrt.

  6. 20. Okt. 2011 · Learn about the remarkable life of Alexander Crummell, a son of a slave who became one of the first black students to study at Cambridge in the 1840s. Discover how he fought for abolition, education and black empowerment in America and Britain.

  7. 15. Apr. 2007 · Alexander Crummell, an Episcopalian priest, missionary, scholar and teacher, was born in New York City in 1819 to free black parents. He spent much of his life addressing the conditions of African Americans, urging an educated black elite to aspire to the highest intellectual attainments as a refutation of the theory of black ...