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Bishop Frederick James | Bishop Frederick James 100 Year Celebration Tribute 최근 답변 122개

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Bishop Frederick Calhoun James

Bishop Frederick Calhoun James. Ecumenical theologian, advocate for fair and decent housing, proponent of civil rights, political leader and public servant …

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Source: scafricanamerican.com

Date Published: 11/2/2021

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Bishop Frederick C. James’s Biography – The HistoryMakers

Bishop Frederick C. James was born on April 7, 1922, in Prosperity, South Carolina, to Rosa Lee Gray and Edward James.

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Source: www.thehistorymakers.org

Date Published: 6/26/2021

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BISHOP, Frederick James – Virtual War Memorial Australia

Frederick James BISHOP was born on 11th March, 1894 in Mundijong, Western Australia. His parents were Albert BISHOP who came from Hampshire in England and …

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Source: vwma.org.au

Date Published: 1/9/2022

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July 23, 2020 Proclaimed as Bishop Frederick Calhoun James …

Engaged with ministry and activism at ninety-eight years old, Bishop James has led an extraordinary career as a minister, educator, and civil …

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Source: columbiapd.net

Date Published: 2/7/2022

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The Christian Recorder, Bishop Frederick C. James

The article tells of the lifelong effort by Bishop Frederick C. James (93) to restore the Rosenwald School he attended as a boy from 1927-1937 in Prosperity …

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Source: www.allianceofethicsandart.org

Date Published: 6/20/2022

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Frederick Western – Wikipedia

Frederick James Western (24 February 1880 – 24 November 1951) was the fifth Anglican Bishop of Tinnevelly in the m-20th century.

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Source: en.wikipedia.org

Date Published: 8/5/2022

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Bishop Frederick James 100 Year Celebration Tribute
Bishop Frederick James 100 Year Celebration Tribute

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  • Author: AME7
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  • Date Published: 실시간 스트리밍 시작일: 2022. 4. 7.
  • Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bAMy88BI9Jg

Bishop Frederick Calhoun James – South Carolina African American History Calendar

Ecumenical theologian, advocate for fair and decent housing, proponent of civil rights, political leader and public servant are only a few of the characteristics of Bishop Frederick Calhoun James. He was born on April 7, 1922, in Prosperity, S.C., the son of Rosa Lee Gray James and Edward James. He graduated from Drayton Street High School, Newberry, South Carolina, and earned his B.A. degree in History/English from Allen University (1943), and his Master’s of Divinity degree from Howard University School of Religion (1947). He also studied at Union Theological Seminary in New York. James returned to South Carolina in 1947 to become pastor of Wayman African Methodist Episcopal Church, Winnsboro; Chappelle Memorial African Methodist Episcopal Church, Columbia; and Mt. Pisgah African Methodist Episcopal Church in Sumter, a position that he held for 19 years. He was also a professor at Allen University in Columbia, and, later, Dean of Allen’s Dickerson School of Theology. As a champion for civil rights, he also became a community and state social and political action leader. In 1960, he was elected Consultant/Director of Social Action of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. In this position, he formed a close relationship with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In 1963, he became President of the Effective Sumter Movement of Sumter, South Carolina, a historic chapter in civil rights. In 1967, as pastor of Mt. Pisgah A.M.E. Church, Rev. James led the sponsorship of the first 221(d)Rent Supplement Housing Project in South Carolina. In 1969, he initiated the first 221(h)Home Ownership Project in the state. He was South Carolina’s first African American Congressional District member of the Department of Alcohol and Drug Abuse and the Department of Social Services. From 1987 to 1992 he was a member of the Columbia Housing Authority and served as vice chair. He also served as Vice President of the S. C. Christian Action Council. In 1972, this eminent theologian and champion of civil rights was elected to the AME Bishopric and was assigned Presiding Bishop of the AME Church in South Africa, Lesotho, Botswana, Swaziland, Namibia, and Mozambique. Headquartered in Cape Town, South Africa, he established schools, a publishing house, churches, and other institutions. Bishop James later was assigned bishop in Arkansas and Oklahoma (1976). He formed a lifelong friendship with then Attorney Bill Clinton. In 1984, he was assigned to the 7th Episcopal District, State of South Carolina. In each of these positions, he built housing projects, strengthened schools and led two colleges to full accreditation; Shorter College, N. Little Rock, Arkansas in 1981 and Allen University, Columbia, South Carolina in 1992. In 1992, Bishop James was assigned Ecumenical Bishop and Chaplaincy Endorsement Officer of the African Methodist Episcopal Church International. In 1993, he was given major fiscal and reconciliation duties as Bishop of the Second Episcopal District (Maryland, Washington, D.C., Virginia, and North Carolina) of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and he stabilized the District. In 1994, he was selected by President Clinton as an official member of the delegation to attend the inauguration of South African President Nelson Mandela, and in 1998 he was again chosen to accompany President and Mrs. Clinton on an official visit to South Africa. He and his wife, Theressa, had retired from active duty in 1996 and returned to live at home in Columbia, South Carolina. Bishop James is a former member of the White House Advisory Board on Historical Black Colleges and Universities, the U.S. State Department’s Advisory Board on Religious Freedom, and National Vice President of the Interfaith Alliance. A life member of the NAACP, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, and a 33 degree Mason, he was inducted into the South Carolina Black Hall of Fame (1991) and the Columbia Housing Authority Wall of Fame (1994). In January of 2003, Bishop James was awarded the state’s highest honor, The Order of the Palmetto, for his significant contributions to South Carolina.

Bishop Frederick C. James’s Biography

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Bishop Frederick C. James was born on April 7, 1922, in Prosperity, South Carolina, to Rosa Lee Gray and Edward James. James received his A.A. degree in 1941 from Bettis Junior College, in Trenton, South Carolina, his B.A. degree in history and English in 1943 from Allen University, in Columbia, South Carolina, and his M.Div. degree in 1947 from the Howard University School of Divinity, in Washington, D.C. He also attended Dickerson Theological Seminary, in Columbia, South Carolina, and Union Theological Seminary, in New York, New York.

James became pastor of Friendship AME Church in 1945 and of Bishop Memorial AME Church in 1946, both in Columbia, South Carolina, and of Wayman AME Church, in Winnsboro, South Carolina, in 1947. In 1949, James became dean of Dickerson Theological Seminary, and, in 1950, pastor of Chappelle Memorial AME Church in Columbia. In 1953, James moved to Sumter, South Carolina, to assume the pastorship of Mt. Pisgah AME Church. In 1960, James was elected director of social action of the AME Church. In 1962, James helped organize and chaired the Sumter Citizens Committee. In 1963, he became president of the Effective Sumter Movement. In 1972, James was elected the 93rd Bishop of the AME Church. He served the 18th and 15th Episcopal Districts from 1972 to 1976, the 12th from 1976 to 1984, the 7th from 1984 to 1992, and the 2nd from 1993 to 1996. James led Shorter College, in Little Rock, Arkansas, to full accreditation in 1981 and Allen University to full accreditation in 1992. That same year, he served as Ecumenical Bishop and Chaplaincy Endorsement Officer of the AME Church. James retired in 1996.

James has served as chair of Allen University and of the Howard Junior High School Center in Prosperity, South Carolina, and as a member of the Columbia Housing Authority. He was a member of the delegation to attend the inauguration of South African President Nelson Mandela in 1994. James is a former member of the White House Advisory Board on Historically Black Colleges and Universities and of the U.S. State Department’s Advisory Board on Religious Freedom and served as National Vice President of the Interfaith Alliance. James is a life member of the NAACP and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity and is a 33 degree Mason. James also served on the board of directors at the National Bank of South Carolina and as a member of the Greater Sumter Chamber of Commerce.

James holds an honorary doctorate of humanities from Monrovia College, in Liberia. James received the Order of the Palmetto in 2003 and the Leon A. Love Lifetime Achievement Award from the South Carolina African American Heritage Foundation and Columbia SC 63: Our Story Matters in 2020. James has been inducted into the South Carolina Black Hall of Fame and the Columbia Housing Authority Wall of Fame

James lives in Columbia, South Carolina, where he resided with his late wife, Theressa Gregg.

Bishop Frederick C. James was interviewed by The HistoryMakers on November 11, 2021.

Frederick James BISHOP

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July 23, 2020 Proclaimed as Bishop Frederick Calhoun James Day by City of Columbia – City of Columbia Police Department

Here is a new release from Columbia SC 63, a civil rights history preservation group about the lifetime achievement of civil rights advocate, theologian, educator and Columbia SC native, Bishop Frederick C. James.

Today, Columbia Police Chief W. H. “Skip” Holbrook presented Bishop James with a proclamation from Mayor Steve Benjamin to acknowledge July 23, 2020 as ‘Bishop Frederick Calhoun James Day.’

Contact: Jonathon Johnson, [email protected]

COLUMBIA—South Carolina’s senior civil rights advocate Bishop Frederick C. James will receive the Leon Love Lifetime Achievement Award from the South Carolina African American Heritage Foundation and Columbia SC 63: Our Story Matters in an outdoor ceremony today.

Engaged with ministry and activism at ninety-eight years old, Bishop James has led an extraordinary career as a minister, educator, and civil rights advocate as an ecumenical theologian, advocate for fair and decent housing, proponent of civil rights, political leader and public servant.

Born in 1922 in Prosperity, South Carolina, Bishop James has served the African Methodist Episcopal Church for more than 70 years in the United States and South Africa. He has also served on White House and State Department advisory boards, and he was an invited dignitary at the signing of the Voting Rights Bill on August 6, 1965. In 2003, he received South Carolina’s highest honor, The Order of the Palmetto, for his significant contributions to the state.

In 1943, Bishop James earned his bachelor’s degree in history and English from Allen University and his master’s of divinity degree from the Howard University School of Religion in 1947. He returned to South Carolina in 1947 to become pastor of Wayman African Methodist Episcopal Church, Winnsboro, then Chappelle Memorial African Methodist Episcopal Church, Columbia, and then Mt. Pisgah African Methodist Episcopal Church in Sumter, a position that he held for 19 years. He was also a professor at Allen University in Columbia, and, later, Dean of Allen University’s Dickerson School of Theology.

As a champion for civil rights, he also became a community and state social and political action leader. In 1960, he was elected consultant and director of social action of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. In this position, he formed a close relationship with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In 1963, he became president of the Effective Sumter Movement of Sumter, a historic chapter in South Carolina civil rights. In 1967, as pastor of Mt. Pisgah A.M.E. Church, the Rev. James led the sponsorship of the first federal housing project in South Carolina, and, in 1969, he initiated the first federal home ownership project in the state.

He was South Carolina’s first African American member of the Department of Social Services and the Department of Alcohol and Drug Abuse. From 1987 to 1992, he was a member of the Columbia Housing Authority and served as vice chair. He also served as vice president of the South Carolina Christian Action Council.

In 1972, this eminent theologian and champion of civil rights was elected to the AME Bishopric and was assigned Presiding Bishop of the AME Church in South Africa, Lesotho, Botswana, Swaziland, Namibia, and Mozambique. Headquartered in Cape Town, South Africa, he established schools, a publishing house, churches, and other institutions.

Bishop James was assigned in 1976 as bishop in Arkansas and Oklahoma. He formed a lifelong friendship with then-state Attorney General Bill Clinton. In 1984, he was assigned to the Seventh Episcopal District, State of South Carolina. In each of these positions, he built housing projects, strengthened schools and led two colleges to full accreditation: Shorter College, North Little Rock, Arkansas in 1981 and Allen University in 1992. In 1992, Bishop James was assigned Ecumenical Bishop and Chaplaincy Endorsement Officer of the African Methodist Episcopal Church International.

In 1993, he was given major fiscal and reconciliation duties as Bishop of the Second Episcopal District (Maryland, Washington, D.C., Virginia, and North Carolina) of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and he stabilized the District. In 1994, he was selected by President Clinton as an official member of the delegation to attend the inauguration of South African President Nelson Mandela, and in 1998 he was again chosen to accompany President and Mrs. Clinton on an official visit to South Africa. He also served on the White House Advisory Board on Historical Black Colleges and Universities, the U.S. State Department’s Advisory Board on Religious Freedom, and as national vice president of the Interfaith Alliance. He and his wife, Theressa, had retired from active duty in 1996 and returned to live at home in Columbia.

A life member of the NAACP, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, and a thirty-third degree Mason, he was inducted into the South Carolina Black Hall of Fame (1991) and the Columbia Housing Authority Wall of Fame (1994).

The lifetime achievement award is part of the Heritage Foundation’s annual ”Preserving Our Places in History” program. Leon A. Love Sr. (1950–2016) was the chairman of the South Carolina African American Heritage Commission, where he championed the importance of identifying, recording, and preserving the African American experience in our state.

Founded in 1993, the South Carolina African American Heritage Commission works to identify and promote the preservation of historic sites, structures, buildings, and culture of the African American experience in South Carolina.

Established to commemorate the height of the Civil Rights Movement, Columbia SC 63: Our Story Matters continues to gather, preserve and showcase images, artifacts, and individual testimonies to ensure that the deeper, multifaceted story of the struggle for freedom and justice in our city is told.

For more information about the Columbia SC 63 Project, visit: https://columbiasc63.com/about/

The Christian Recorder, Bishop Frederick C. James

[ISSUE TWENTY-ONE]

“It’s a very connected world”

“It’s a very connected world, Marianne.”

The poem presents musically, powerfully, tenderly, a central idea in Aesthetic Realism: that every person of the past and now is related, connected with all other people and things in this universe we’re in and share. Marianne is related to sun and winds, young men, streets, socks, ties, afternoons, rooms, forces of nature, with matter-of-fact simplicity and grandeur. The poem appears in Hail, American Development, nominated for a National Book Award (see link below right).

It is a pleasure now to give some instances of how this is “a very connected world.”

Dr. Jamye Williams, Rosetta Miller Perry,

& The Christian Recorder

Here is a tale about how people, geography, time, and large feelings came together in such a way that my article, “A South Carolina Story about Hope”, was published by The Christian Recorder (TCR), and is reaching people around the world at this very moment–in ninety-one languages!The article tells of the lifelong effort by Bishop Frederick C. James (93) to restore the Rosenwald School he attended as a boy from 1927-1937 in Prosperity, SC, so that it might be used by today’s community as a resource of education and culture. It also tells how the Alliance was instrumental in attaining a Puffin Foundation grant which, unexpectedly, resulted in saving the school building from devastation in the recent floods and rains. A link to the story appears below, right.A few weeks ago, Bishop James called me in New Yorkhad called to congratulate him on the story, which she’d read in the Tennessee Tribune. He suggested that I call Dr. Williams in the hope of interviewing her for the Alliance’s oral history project, “The Force of Ethics in Civil Rights.” I did call her, and during our lively conversation – which will indeed lead to an interview – I learned that she’d lived in Tennessee for many years and was friends with Rosetta Miller Perry, publisher of the Tennessee Tribune.I was glad to express my gratitude to RosettaMiller Perry for publishing articles by me and my colleagues about Aesthetic Realism over many years, and also for opening her offices to the Alliance for video interviews with many unsung pioneers in Nashville. On one of these trips, I conducted interviews with Rosetta Miller Perry and her late husband Dr. L.O.P. Perry in their home, which added new, important knowledge of civil rights history, including in relation to medicine and publishing, to our project.Which brings me again to The Christian Recorder, the official journal of the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church, and the oldest black periodical in continuous publication since its inception around 1848. Dr. Jamye Williams, is an educator – as is her husband, Dr. McDonald Williams (98). Her work as a religious writer, human rights activist, and leader in the ranks of the AME church continues to this day! She suggested I contact Dr. Calvin H. Sydnor III, the 20th editor of TCR and send him my article. I did.

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