Lost Opportunities: Bryn Mawrs that Could Have Been

Bryn Mawr’s founders were involved in various institutions dedicated to serving formerly enslaved and Indigenous peoples. ​

How would Bryn Mawr’s history and present be different if our founders had united their various projects from the beginning? ​

How might those unrealized pathways clarify new possibilities for our future?  

Bethel AME Church

Tucked away on a modest side street off Lancaster Avenue, one-half mile from Bryn Mawr College, stands the Bethel AME Church, the oldest African American church on the Mainline. It was established by local Black residents John Hooper, George Barrett, and Samuel Curtis. Sermons delivered from this pulpit, like that of HCC Astwood in 1897, promoted Black pride and endurance in the face of inequity and white oppression. ​

Bryn Mawr Trustee John B. Garrett was one of several white neighbors who donated money to purchase the land for Bethel AME Church, despite opposition from other white residents. Garrett subsequently served as Treasurer of the Trustee Board, helping to steward the fledgling parish. Yet, there is no record of Garrett’s linking his philanthropic efforts at Bryn Mawr with those at Bethel AME Church. ​

photograph of the front of the Bethel AME Church in Bryn Mawr.
The Bethel AME Church at 50 S Merion Avenue in Bryn Mawr. The current building dates to 1921. Photo credit: Alicia Walker
A colored map of Lower Merion Township.
Bryn Mawr and Rosemont Stations, Atlas of Lower Merion, Montgomery County Including Part of Delaware County and Overbrook Farms, Wynnefield & Overbrook Impr. Co., Philadelphia. 1896. From the collection of the Lower Merion Township Building and Planning Department; high-resolution scanning provided by the Regional Digital Imaging Center at the Athenaeum of Philadelphia.​

John B. Garret’s large estate in Rosemont is noted on this map at the far left. The much smaller plot of land on which the Bethel AME Church stands is below. Bryn  Mawr College is above.

How might the history of the College be different if he had? How might the collaboration of Barrett, Curtis, and Garrett have paved the way to a different Bryn Mawr? 

Timeline of Bethel AME church
1794
African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church is founded in Philadelphia by Richard Allen, a formerly enslaved Black leader who believed that Black Americans needed their own church that centered liberation and equality in its theology and community
1816
AME Church is officially recognized as a distinct Methodist denomination
1878
John Hooper founds the first AME Church on the mainline but it lacks a permanent home
1888
George Barrett and Samuel Curtis purchase property in Bryn Mawr and erect Bethel AME Church (rebuilt in 1921)
1899
In his ground-breaking sociological study, The Philadelphia Negro: A Social Study, W.E.B Du Bois identifies church-going as the primary leisure activity of the city’s African American population

“Already the African Methodist Church has begun its work. The Anglo-Saxon, greedy of gain, adventure and territorial robbery is absorbing, utilizing and civilizing those whom they would destroy, but bye and bye, through the agency of Allen’s Church [the AME Church] and Allen’s civilization, the Anglo-Saxon will be driven out and Africa will be redeemed for Christ and the race upon the governmental shoulders of the A.M.E. Church.” ​

Sermon delivered by Reverend HCC Astwood at the Bryn Mawr AME Church, February 14, 1897​

It is possible that African American service staff of the College were members of this church? Were they among Astwood’s audience?