London Ferrill

London Ferrill, also spelled Ferrell, (1789–October 12, 1854) was a former slave and carpenter from Virginia who became the second preacher of the First African Baptist Church in Lexington, Kentucky, serving from 1823 to 1854. During his 31 years of service, Ferrill attracted and baptized many new members in the growing region; by 1850 the church had 1,820 members and was the largest of any congregation in the state, black or white.

London Ferrell
Born1789
DiedOctober 12, 1854(1854-10-12) (aged 64–65)
Occupationminister
Personal
ReligionBaptist

Of mixed race, Ferrill had been apprenticed as a carpenter when young. His wife, a free person of color, purchased his freedom and they moved to Kentucky by 1812. In Lexington, Ferrill was successful in working with both black and white leaders of the city, and became highly respected. The funeral procession for him numbered 5,000 people, the largest in the city after that of the white statesman Henry Clay. Ferrill led the first black church west of the Allegheny Mountains; it was the third oldest black Baptist congregation in the United States, and had been founded in 1790 by enslaved preacher Peter Durrett, also from Virginia.

Early life and education

London was born into slavery in 1789 in Hanover County, Virginia, where his enslaved mother was owned by Richard Ferrill, an English immigrant. The unmarried master died soon after. Ferrill's estate, including slaves, was inherited by his sister Ann (Ferrill) Winston. She named the mixed-race slave boy as London Ferrill after her brother, who was likely his father.[1][2] As noted by Edward Ball, author of Slaves in the Family (1999), a study of the interracial relationships among his ancestors, mixed-race slaves were frequently given names that distinguished them from the others. London Ferrill is an example of such naming.

Ann Winston died when London Ferrill was eight or nine years old. When her estate was settled, London was sold away from his mother to Colonel Samuel Overton. Soon the master apprenticed Ferrill to learn carpentry, a skilled trade. This was often the pattern for children of white masters, to give them an artisan skill to enable them to support themselves as adults.

Ferrill was baptized in 1809 at the age of 20 and had a conversion experience with the Baptists. The minister and congregation approved of his preaching and singing, and he began to preach more widely in the community.[1]

Marriage and family

As a young man, Ferrill married a free black woman named Rodah Hood, who was also of mixed race.[2] She bought her husband's freedom from Overton's estate after his death. (Townsend records her first name as Rhoda.)[3] At that time, Ferrill and Rodah migrated to Kentucky; they settled in Lexington about 1812.[4]

A few years after Rodah's death in 1833 during a major cholera epidemic in Lexington, Ferrill adopted two orphaned children, siblings Eleazer and Elizabeth Jackson.[1] He never remarried.

Career

As a slave, Ferrill was not permitted to be ordained, but he was asked by local people to preach, and about fifty people converted under his preaching before he moved to Kentucky. He moved to Lexington, where another preacher, Peter Durrett (known as Old Captain) was preaching at what is known as the First African Baptist Church of Lexington. Durrett was quite old, and the people desired Ferrill to begin preaching as well. In 1817, he joined the First Baptist church, a white congregation. The local leaders of the white Baptist community were uncertain whether or not people Durrett had baptised should be accepted into the church, as Durrett had not been regularly ordained.[5]

Ferrill was ordained in 1822, and leaders of the First Baptist Church helped the First African Baptist Church be covenanted in "fellowship" in 1822; this allowed it to be independent.[6] In 1823 the Trustees of Lexington formally appointed Ferrill as the preacher for the First African Baptist Church, to succeed the aging founder, Peter Durrett. It was the oldest black Baptist church west of the Allegheny Mountains and the third oldest in the United States.[2]

Ferrill worked well with both blacks and whites in the growing city. In 1824 his church was received into the Elkhorn Association, the local Baptist association made up mostly of white churches.[7] After several years, Ferrill had created considerable goodwill. White leaders initiated a legislative petition to permit him to remain in the state, in response to a threat from rivals competing for control of the black church. They had threatened to force Ferrill from the state, using the law that required free blacks from other states to leave Kentucky after 90 days.[7]

In 1833 Ferrill was notable as among the few clergy to stay in Lexington during the cholera epidemic, when he cared for the sick, dying and bereaved. Five hundred of the city's total 7,000 population died, including his wife Rodah[1] and nearly one-third of the congregation of Christ Church Episcopal.[8] Other ministers who stayed were Rev. Benjamin Bosworth Smith of Christ Church, whose wife also died in the epidemic; and Father Ed McMahon of the Catholic Church.[9]

With the growth of Lexington and the region, Ferrill baptized many new converts, including those in outlying areas. He continued to attract members to his growing congregation. By 1850 the First African Baptist Church had 1,820 members, both slave and free, and was the largest congregation, black or white, in the state. Ferrill was said to have baptized 5,000 persons during his years of service in the region.[7]

Death and legacy

Ferrill died of a heart attack[2] October 12, 1854.[5] His funeral procession numbered nearly 5,000, the largest in the city after that two years before for the white planter and statesman Henry Clay.[2] Because of his high reputation and long service in the city, Ferrill was buried in the Old Episcopal Burying Ground, the only African American so honored.[2]

In 2010 Christ Church Cathedral held a special joint service with First African Baptist to commemorate Ferrill, at which both choirs sang. Christ Church parishioner Robert Voll, who has worked on the monument and community garden projects (see below), said, "London Ferrill was a force for unity, a force for connecting the black and white communities of Lexington."[2]

Legacy and honors

  • 1854, Ferrill was the only person of color to be buried in the Old Episcopal Burying Ground.
  • 2008, Christ Church Cathedral dedicated its community garden in Ferrill's honor.
  • 2010, Christ Church Cathedral helped gain approval for a city monument installed in Ferrill's honor at the Old Episcopal Burying Ground. The state has also memorialized the site with a highway marker. Christ Church held a joint service with First African Baptist to commemorate Ferrill and the monument.[2]

References

  1. A.W. Elder, "Biography of London Ferrill, Pastor of the First Baptist Church of Colored Persons, Lexington, KY.": A.W. Elder, printer, 1854, 12 pgs, online edition, Documenting the American South, University of North Carolina, accessed 6 May 2011
  2. Tom Eblen, "Churches join to honor former slave", Lexington Herald-Leader, 21 February 2010, accessed 28 August 2010
  3. Townsend, John (1974). Lore of the Meadowland: Short Studies in Kentuckiana (Print) (Reprint ed.). Lexington Ky: Keystone Printery.
  4. "First African Baptist Church", Lexington, Kentucky/A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary, National Park Service, accessed 29 August 2011
  5. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p321-326
  6. J. H. Spencer, "Colored Baptists in Early Kentucky", in A History of Kentucky Baptists, 1885, Volume 2; rpt. 1988, pp. 653–669, accessed 6 May 2011
  7. H. E. Nutter, "A Brief History of the First Baptist Church (Black) Lexington, Kentucky", in Souvenir, Sesqui-Centennial Celebration, 1790–1940, Lexington, KY: 1940, accessed 22 August 2010
  8. "Christ Church Episcopal", Lexington, National Park Service. Retrieved 21 August 2010.
  9. The Advocate, The Episcopal Diocese of Lexington, Kentucky, Summer 2008, p. 5
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