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Revision as of 03:39, 18 July 2007

William Saunders Crowdy (August 11, 1847August 4, 1908) was an American soldier, preacher, entrepreneur, theologian, and pastor. As one of the earliest Black Hebrew Israelites in the United States, he re-established the Church of God and Saints of Christ in 1896.

Early life

In 1847 the Prophet Crowdy was born into slavery at the Charlotte Hall Plantation in Maryland. He was born in a one room slave cabin near the Patuxent River in the middle of a violent nighttime thunderstorm. Crowdy lived his early life in bondage working first by milking the plantation owner's cows. As he grew older he was assigned by the slave overseer to tend the plantation's mellon patch, and then to work as a stable boy and tobacco drier. Life was hard on a 19th century plantation and the cruel overseer on Crowdy's plantation punished the slaves brutally. Crowdy was a religious and caring man from a young age. According to oral history Crowdy was beaten by the slavemaster at age 7 for taking too much cornpone from the ration cook to feed his sister. He spent the night locked in a barn for punishment but prayed to Moses to be released from bondage of his captors. Ten years to the day later at age 17 Crowdy was set free. He immediately joined the United States Army and served in the Civil War from 1863 to 1865 to liberate his fellow brothers from their bonds. He joined the United States Colored Troops 19th Regiment of Maryland along with his half-brother Daniel[1]

Military man

Crowdy's unit was raised at Benedict, Maryland on December 19, 1863 when the United States Government offered compensation to his enslavers for his freedom to fight. During the Civil War the 19th Regiment USCT fought at the Battle of the Wilderness in 1864. Crowdy served as a laborer and supply storesman, and participated in the capture of a confederate flour wagon being smuggled into Petersburg, Virginia during the seige of Richmond. Crowdy remained in the Army after the war to become a Buffalo Soldier. He was promoted to quartermaster sergeant in the Fifth Cavalry in 1867, receiving his discharge in 1872 . He later became a cook on the Santa Fe railroad. While in Guthrie, Oklahoma, on Tuesday, September 13, 1892, he had a vision which he believed to be from God calling on him to lead his people to the true religion. However he resisted this, and it was only when he had another vision while chopping wood in 1895 . Terrified by the vision, his hair turned white, and he was unrecognizable to his family. He started preaching in Guthrie, and then set up Tabernacles in Emporia and Lawrence in 1896 . In these early days he was arrested 22 times. After setting up another Tabernacle in Topeka, he spread his creed in Sedalia, Missouri; Chicago, Illinois; and several cities in New York, establishing an Elder-in-Charge in each city before moving to the next.

In 1899 he moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania establishing his permanent residence and organizational headquarters there for four years. By 1901 his congregation had more than 1300 members and he had set up several enterprises: a general store, barber shop, restaurant, and print shop. However he ran foul of the authorities here too and was accused by them of anarchy and preaching false doctrine. At a mass meeting of other ministers held in February 1902, called for him to be stopped. He responded by saying:

"The more they denounce me, the more the people pack my services. I came to this city less than a year ago from Texas and have taken in over 1300 converts. They are jealous of my success. I teach my people to love one another, keep the Ten Commandments, pay their honest debts, and abstain from alcohol and tobacco. If that's anarchy and false doctrine, I am willing to take a back seat. Mayor Ashbridge has seen my work and he finds no offense in me."

In 1903, he bought 40 acres of land in Suffolk, Virginia, calling it "Canaan Land." More land was subsequently purchased by Bishop William H. Plummer and this is now the international headquarters of the denomination. In 1905 he sent missionaries to South Africa and by 1906 he declared Chief Joseph W. Crowdy, Bishop William H. Plummer, and Elder Calvin S. Skinner as future leaders of his congregation.

William Crowdy died on August 4, 1908, in Newark, New Jersey and was buried in Belleville, Virginia.

Today the Church of God and Saints of Christ is the oldest living Hebrew Israelite congregation that started in the United States. The congregation, following the teachings of Prophet Crowdy, follows the tenets of the Biblical Jews and adheres to the Ten Commandments. The doctrine also includes observance of the Sabbath and the belief in the medium of prophecy. A key concept is the Exodus, the liberation of people in bondage. The most important festival is Passover, a week-long homecoming in Belleville with a ceremonial Seder.

References

Prophet William Saunders Crowdy 1847 - 1908

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  1. ^ [1] Civil War Regiment Records, National Park Service, Retrieved July 6, 2007