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Edward R. Crowther, Adams State University, USA Keith Harper, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, USA
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DOI:10.17265/2159-550X/2017.01.002
This paper explores the race and religion during the Progressive Era by examining the relationships between Richard Henry Boyd and Elias Camp Morris, two leading members of the nascent National Baptist Convention, an African American denomination, and Boyd’s relationship with James Marion Frost, the Corresponding Secretary of the white Southern Baptist Convention. Their interactions highlight the contours and limitations of ecclesiastical activity within and across the color line in the early 20th Century.
National Baptist Convention, race, African-Americans