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Michigan
These organizations aided the ever-increasing number of fugitive slaves fleeing north, both spiritually and materially. Significant figures in the abolitionist movement were associated with the church, such as Soujourner Truth, John Brown, and Frederick Douglass. Douglass discussed abolition with Second Baptist leaders before addressing citizens at the church 1859.The church's activism was not limited to slavery, however. In 1843 and in 1865, it hosted a "State Convention of Colored Citizens" to petition the Michigan government for Negro Suffrage. After the Civil War, the church played a vital role in helping thousands of migrating freed slaves in securing homes and jobs in and around Detroit.
The
present Second Baptist Church building replaced the Congregation's first
church which was destroyed by fire in 1914. Two additions, one in 1926,
and a second in 1968, flank either side of the building and testify to
the congregation's continued vitality. The Second Baptist Church today
remains, as it has been throughout its history, a source of inspiration
and encouragement to its members and neighbors.
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