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One of the nation's first African American churches was built in Williamsburg

How both enslaved and free Black people came together to start what is now known as one of the first Black churches in the United States.

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. — The year was 1776 and a group of courageous slaves and free Blacks searched for a place to worship God in their own way.

Led by Rev. Moses, a free Black itinerant preacher, they found a small clearing in the woods to gather. In 1781, the group – under the leadership of Reverend Gowan Pamphlet – organized as Baptist and moved into a local carriage house.

This congregation would mark the founding of one of the nation’s first Black churches, what would eventually be known as the First Baptist Church of Williamsburg.

The congregation continued to grow and in 1856 dedicated a new brick church near the carriage house on Nassau Street where they would remain for the next 100 years.

That building was demolished when the congregation moved into their current home in 1956, but recent excavation efforts have worked to uncover and preserve the history of this extraordinary community of faith.

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