First African Presbyterian Church, the nations oldest African American Presbyterian Church, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was founded in 1807 by former Tennessee slave John Gloucester. This church is the fourth of the first five African American churches founded in the city of Philadelphia. After gaining his freedom, Gloucester traveled to Philadelphia in 1807 to appeal to the Presbytery to become a licensed preacher, and thus began his journey with this “Mother Church of African American Presbyterianism.”
In the early years, Gloucester preached in homes, rented spaces, or if the crowd was large enough, on the empty lot at the corner of Seventh and Shippen (now Bainbridge) Streets. In 1809, First Colored Presbyterian, as it was first named, was chartered by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania and by 1811, the lot where Gloucester gave his first sermons was purchased and the churchs first edifice was built. In 1966, the church changed its name to First African Presbyterian Church.
Reverend Gloucester believed that the Christian education of the congregation would be further enhanced if the members could read the Bible for themselves, and therefore established a Sabbath School. Many graduates went on to become Presbyterian ministers including Gloucesters four sons, John Jr, Stephen, Jeremiah, and James Gloucester, as well as Samuel Eli Cornish, Thomas Amos, and Jonathan Gibbs, who all returned to later be installed as pastors of their home church.
Over the years, the church’s membership has been as rich as its history. Some early members include Cyrus Bustill, a baker who delivered bread to General George Washington, and Hannah Till, the cook to General Washington and the Marquis De Lafayette. Others famous members are Underground Railroad conductor William Still, Lebanon Cemetery owner Jacob C. White, The Pyramid Club owner Walter F. Jerrick, co-founders of the baseball club The Philadelphia Pythians Octavius Catto and Jacob C. White Jr., abolitionist Nathaniel Depee, photographer John Mosley, and