Prince Hall

clergyman, abolitionist
Born: 1748
Birthplace: Barbados


Hall established the African Lodge of the Honorable Society of Free and
Accepted Masons of Boston in 1775. It was the first lodge of black
Freemasons in the world. The lodge received a permanent charter from the
Grand Lodge of England in 1784. The secret fraternity, which still exists,
promoted brotherly love and social, political, and economic improvement for
its members. 

Hall arrived in Boston in 1765 and was a slave for William Hall. He was
freed in 1770, shortly after the Boston Massacre, and worked at a variety of
jobs, including as a leather worker for the Boston Regiment of Artillery. He
was one of a few black men who fought at the Battle of Bunker Hill.

Hall became a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church and
advocated black rights and the abolition of slavery. He opened a school for
black children in his home.

Died: 1807




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