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"For the sake of peace, love, and nothing but that..."

"For the sake of peace, love, and nothing but that..." referring to the break with the Asbury Methodist Church of Wilmington, Reverend Peter Spencer The August Quarterly, originally known as the...

"For the sake of peace, love, and nothing but that..." referring to the break with the Asbury Methodist Church of Wilmington, Reverend Peter Spencer The August Quarterly, originally known as the Big Quarterly, is the oldest continuously celebrated African American festival in the nation. First celebrated in 1814, and every year since, the festival commemorates the founding of the first African American church incorporated in the United States, the Union Church of African Members. In the early years, the festival became a kind of independence day for blacks of the Dalmarva Peninsula. On condition that they return at the end of the weekend, slaves were permitted to gather once a year to celebrate the freedom to worship in their own unique way, free from discrimination. Relatives and friends separated by slavery were reunited to spend the weekend worshipping , showing off their finest clothes, telling stories, and sharing African American music, dance, humor and food. Eventually, delegates from over 600 churches representing more than 25,000 members in the United States and Canada assembled annually in in Wilmington during the last weekend in August. It was this quarterly meeting, open to all church members, that became known as the "Big Quarterly." Prior to the Civil War, the gathering provided a forum for slaves and free men and women to publicly discuss colonization and other issues of slavery. For a few, it offered the chance to escape. Many runaways were aided along the Underground Railroad in Delaware by "conductors" and abolitionist of the stature of Thomas Garrett, Harriet Tubman, John Hunn and Samuel D. Burris. Suspicions were aroused when a few of the elders of the black community referred to the festivities as "big excursions on the Underground Railroad." After slavery ended, the August Quarterly tradition continued. The Wilmington Morning News of August 31, 1885, reporting on the annual gathering stated, "The incoming trains of Saturday and yesterday up to noon brought large numbers of colored persons from points along the lines of the different railroads. The steamers Champion and Delaware brought excursions from Camden and Salem, N.J., and respectively. The steamers Wilmington and Brandywine also brought a goodly number of persons from Philadelphia, Chester and Marcus Hook, most of whom returned by rail." Today the festival continues to draw people from around the nation. This painting by Simmie Knox, a former resident of Delaware, depicts the August Quarterly around 1950. In the 800 block of French Street before it was razed in 1971 under a program of urban renewal. In the in 1971 foreground is the Church's founder, Rev. Peter Spencer. In 1805, Spencer who had been born a slave and purchased his own freedom, led a group of forty followers out of the white Asbury Methodist Church of Wilmington to establish their own congregation. It was not until 1813 that Spencer, with his associate William Anderson, was finally able to found the Union church of African Members. Now as in every year following Spencer's death in 1842, the festival includes a wreath-laying ceremony to honor the Church's founder. Submitted by @lampbane

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