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1 References  





2 Sources  





3 External links  














Cato Perkins







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Cato Perkins was an enslaved African-American man from Charleston, South Carolina, who became a missionary to Sierra Leone.

Cato was enslaved by John Perkins.[1] Cato Perkins self-emancipated by joining the British during the Siege of Charleston, and he joined General ClintoninNew York and worked as a carpenter there. Perkins was evacuated to Birchtown, Nova Scotia, in 1783, and he is listed in the Book of Negroes. Upon arriving in Nova Scotia, he was converted by John Marrant of the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion, which was a Methodist splinter group. Perkins was ordained into the church[2] and later took over the running of it.[3]

Perkins migrated to Sierra Leone, where he led a strike of carpenters against the Sierra Leone Company. The new life in Sierra Leone was not what the group had expected and Perkins petitioned the SLC to improve Freetown;[1][4] In 1793 Perkins travelled with Isaac Anderson to London to make their petition heard.[5] By 1800, inflated price-fixing was leading to food riots and Perkins negotiated between the rioters and the council.[4]

Perkins established the first Huntingdon's Connexion church, with William Ash and John Ellis[6] and later on, other Nova Scotian settler preachers established churches in the Liberated African villages.

Perkins died in Sierra Leone in 1805,[7] although some sources state that he lived until 1820;[6][8] his churches are the remnant of Huntingdon's Connexion church worldwide.

References

[edit]
  • ^ Equiano’s World website, ‘’Associates’’
  • ^ a b Oxford University Press website, No Useless Mouth: Waging War and Fighting Hunger in the American Revolution; Chapter 8, Black Loyalist Hunger Prevention in Sierra Leone (2019)
  • ^ William and Mary College website, Perceptions, Promises, And Power: Anna Maria Falconbridge, The Sierra Leone Company, And The Development Of Freetown, 1791-1802, by Jackson Wood (2022)
  • ^ a b Early Religious Influences in Sierra Leone. by F.W. Butt-Thompson, published in the Baptist Quarterly 16.7 (July 1956), pages 313-322.
  • ^ Countess of Huntingdon Connexion website, The Elect Lady, by Gilbert W. Kirby (1972)
  • ^ Black Loyalists Digital Collections website, Cato Perkins
  • Sources

    [edit]
    [edit]

    Sierra Leone website Two Voyages to Sierra Leone, During the Years 1791-2-3, by Anna Maria Falconbridge


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cato_Perkins&oldid=1221389641"

    Categories: 
    American rebel slaves
    American Methodist missionaries
    African-American Methodist clergy
    American Methodist clergy
    Black Loyalists
    Methodist missionaries in Sierra Leone
    Nova Scotian Settlers
    Sierra Leone Creole people
    1805 deaths
    18th-century American slaves
    African-American missionaries
    People enslaved in South Carolina
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Year of birth unknown
     



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