Florence Spearing Randolph Explained

Florence Spearing Randolph
Birth Name:Florence Spearing
Birth Date:August 9, 1866
Birth Place:Charleston, South Carolina
Nationality:American
Alma Mater:Drew University, Livingstone College
Occupation:Minister
Spouse: his death

Florence Spearing Randolph (August 6 or August 9, 1866 – December 28, 1951) was an American clubwoman, suffragist, and ordained minister, pastor of the Wallace Chapel AME Zion Church in Summit, Union County, New Jersey, United States. from 1925 to 1946. She organized the New Jersey Federation of Colored Women's Clubs and was president of the New Jersey Women's Foreign Missionary Society.[1]

Early life

Florence Spearing was born in Charleston, South Carolina, the daughter of John Spearing and Anna Smith Spearing. Her father was a cabinetmaker.[2] Spearing trained as a dressmaker and moved north to New Jersey, where she lived with her sister Lena for work.[3] Later in life, she became the first African-American woman to enroll at Drew University.[4] In 1933 she was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from Livingstone College.

Career

Florence Spearing Randolph was one of the first women in the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church denomination to be ordained as a deacon (1901) and as an elder (1903), and licensed to preach.[5] She came to the Wallace Chapel as a temporary pastor in 1925; this arrangement was soon made permanent, and she was the church's pastor for over twenty years, until she retired in 1946.[6] During her tenure, the church built its current building and paid the debts incurred, in full.

She was a delegate to an international ecumenical conference in London in 1901. As head of the New Jersey Women's Foreign Missionary Society, she set up a Bureau of Supplies to collect and distribute donations for missionaries. She also visited AMEZ missionaries in Liberia and Ghana, from 1922 to 1924.[7]

Florence Spearing Randolph served on the executive board of the New Jersey Woman Suffrage Association. In 1915, she was founder and president of the New Jersey Federation of Colored Women's Clubs.[8]

Personal life and legacy

Florence Spearing married Hugh Randolph, a railroad cook, in 1884. Their daughter Leah Viola Randolph was born in 1887. She was widowed when Hugh Randolph died in 1913. Rev. Florence Spearing Randolph died in 1951, aged 85 years. Her granddaughter Anice Johnson Ward saved a suitcase of Rev. Randolph's papers, and in 1982 shared it with Temple University history professor Bettye Collier-Thomas;[9] sermons from the suitcase were included in Collier-Thomas's Daughters of Thunder: Black Women Preachers and Their Sermons, 1850-1979 (1998).[10]

There is a Reverend Florence Spearing Randolph Prize given by the Theological School at Drew University, in her memory. There is also a historical plaque explaining her career at the Wallace Chapel, placed there as part of the New Jersey Women's Heritage Trail.[11] In 2015 the Women's Home and Missionary Society held a Founder's Day to celebrate the life of Randolph.[12]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Gloria H. Dickinson and J. Maurice Hicks, "Florence Spearing Randolph" in Joan N. Burstyn, ed., Past and Promise: Lives of New Jersey Women (Syracuse University Press 1996): 185-186.
  2. Jessie Carney Smith, ed., Notable Black American Women Book 2 (VNR AG 1996): 537-538.
  3. Robert A. Hageman, "The Rev. Florence Randolph: Pastor Of Wallace Chapel Helped Spearhead Women's Suffrage" Summit Historical Society (April 11, 2001).
  4. https://uknow.drew.edu/confluence/display/DrewHistory/Reverend+Florence+Spearing+Randolph+Prize Reverend Florence Spearing Randolph Prize
  5. Betty Robison, "Florence Spearing Randolph" Charisma Magazine (January 31, 2004).
  6. http://www.njwomenshistory.org/discover/biographies/florence-spearing-randolph/ "Florence Spearing Randolph"
  7. Finding aid, Manuscript Group 1321, Florence Spearing Randolph (1866-1951), African Methodist Episcopal minister, New Jersey Historical Society.
  8. Patrick Lombardi, "Florence Spearing Randolph" Black History New Jersey (February 17, 2016).
  9. Beverly M. Reid, "Black History Month: A look for identity" NJ.com (February 1, 2008).
  10. Bettye Collier-Thomas, Daughters of Thunder: Black Women Preachers and Their Sermons, 1850-1979 (Jossey-Bass 1998).
  11. http://www.blogarama.com/frame?siteId=50224&postid=3925406 Florence Spearing Randolph Historical Marker
  12. http://whoms.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/2015FlorenceRandolphDayProgram-1.pdf Florence Randolph Day program