Preston Washington Explained

Preston Washington
Birth Name:Preston Robert Washington
Birth Date:August 26, 1948
Birth Place:Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Church:Memorial Baptist Church
Occupation:minister
Alma Mater:Williams College
Union Theological Seminary
Columbia University
Spouse:Rev. Renee F. Washington
Type:Priest
Reverend
Religion:Baptist
Death Place:Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Metropolis:Harlem, New York
Appointed:1976
Successor:Renee Frances Washington

Preston Robert Washington (August 26, 1948  - June 25, 2003) was a prominent minister of Memorial Baptist Church in Harlem, New York. He was a co-founder of the Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement and held leadership positions from 1986 to 2001, bringing millions of dollars in development projects for housing and retail to the neighborhood.

Early life

Washington was born in Manhattan, New York. He grew up on 99th Street in Spanish Harlem and attended public schools. He then attended Williams College, graduating summa cum laude in 1970.[1] While he was at Williams, he was a member of the social and literary fraternity St. Anthony Hall.[2]

Next, attended Union Theological Seminary where he received a master of divinity. His masters thesis was The Paradox of Theological Education: A Third Way.[3] He also received a doctorate in education from the Teacher's College at Columbia University. His Ed.D. dissertation was The Black Religious Imagination: A Theological and a Pedagogical Interpretation of the Afro-American Sermon in the Twentieth Century.[4]

Career

In 1976, Washington became a senior pastor at Memorial Baptist Church in Harlem, New York, serving there until he died in 2003. The congregation grew to 1,500 people under his leadership. The church became a popular stop for politicians.

In 1986 with Canon Frederick B. Williams, Washington co-founded the Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement (HCCI), a consortium of 90 congregations that developed housing and retail services. He served as the president and CEO of HCCI. HCCI helped start a revival in Harlem during the difficult years of the 1980s and early 1990s. HCCI spent $200 million in the Bradhurst section of Harlem, developing 1,300 housing units. Part of this was House of Hope which built houses for homeless single parents and their children.[5] HCCI also established thirty retail stores in Harlem.

HCCI spent $1.7 million, supporting programs for housing for people with HIV/AIDS, as well as education and prevention of HIV/AIDS. Washington said, "'What kind of damn God is this that allows this damn stuff? Babies dying of AIDS?'' I have to constantly check my own faith because this disease threatens every aspect of faith."

Washington encouraged his congregation to welcome tourists who arrived by busloads to hear gospel music. These tourists made contributions that helped renovate the church. Washington even organized the church service so that his preaching would take place after the tourists, many who did not speak English, had left. In 1996 he told NPR that "members joked that the church was a European church on Sunday morning and a clandestine black church at nights during the week."[6]

Washington also pushed the role of a church into managing three parks and a jobs skills training program. In 1997, he told Mother Jones magazine, ''We want to get beyond soup kitchens and care packages."

He also preached in China, Cuba, and South Korea. He served on the board of the Black Leadership Commission on AIDS, the Boys Choir of Harlem, and the Consortium for Central Harlem Development.

Publications

Honors

Personal life

He married Renee Frances Washington who also became a minister and assisted at Memorial Baptist Church. They had five sons together: Brandon, Devon, Jamel, Nicholas, and Preston Jr. They also had two adopted sons: Keith Gay and Jonathan R. Staples. They lived in New Rochelle, New York.

In 2003, Washington died at the Medical Center in Manhattan of heart failure at the age of 54 years.

In 2004, Rev. Renee Washington was elected to succeed Washington as senior minister of Memorial Baptist Church.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Preston Washington, Class of 1970 . 2022-06-03 . Williams College . en-US.
  2. 2020 . Necrology . The Review . St. Anthony Hall . Fall . 16.
  3. Washington, Preston Robert. 1991. The paradox of theological education: a third way. New York, N.Y.: Union Theological Seminary. via WorldCat
  4. Washington, Preston Robert. 1991. The Black religious imagination: a theological and a pedagogical interpretation of the Afro-American sermon in the twentieth century. Columbia University. via WorldCat
  5. Web site: Wright . K. . 2003-06-30 . HARLEM PASSING . 2022-06-03 . City Limits . en-US.
  6. https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D05E1DF1E3AF937A35754C0A9659C8B63 Douglas Martin, "Preston R. Washington, 54, Minister in Harlem, Is Dead"
  7. Web site: A CHURCH WITH A LOVING PASTOR . 2022-06-03 . www.mbcvisionharlem.org.