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Cambridge University’s ‘first black student’

ACADEMIC: Alexander Crummell

NO ONE knows when the first black student studied at Cambridge but it is thought that black undergraduates may have studied at or on the fringes of the university as far back as the early 18th century.

A Jamaican named Francis Williams is said to have been educated in Cambridge in the early 1700s. A mixed-race violinist called George Augustus Bridgetower was awarded a degree for music he composed in 1812.

However, the first black student at Cambridge for whom official university records exist is Alexander Crummell.

An Episcopal preacher and son of an American slave, he studied at Queens’ College in the mid-18th century.

There is copious evidence of his time in Cambridge and his name appears in Alumni Cantabrigienses, a list of all known Cambridge students, published in 1922.

Dr Sarah Meer, university lecturer in English, became fascinated by Crummell when she encountered references to his life and career in the course of her research into 19th century American writers.

She was quickly intrigued by the way in which his story intersected with developments in literature and politics, especially British involvement in campaigns against American slavery.

“Crummell was one of many African-American travellers to Britain in the 1840s, and like more famous figures such as Frederick Douglass, he attempted to enlist British support for the abolition of slavery,” said Meer. “But Crummell was unusual in choosing to stay to read for a degree.”

Crummell was born in New York. His father was a freed slave, reputedly an African prince brought from the continent to work for a wealthy merchant in the city, and his mother was a free-born woman from Long Island.
Although Crummell’s father was illiterate, his parents had aspirations for their five children, and in the 1820s, the young Crummell attended one of the African Free Schools, primary schools set up by New York abolitionists to educate the children of freed slaves. There, he was encouraged by an Englishman called Charles Andrews, a stern disciplinarian.

Many black children left formal education at about 14 to begin work in low-paid trades, but, against all the odds, Crummell and two black friends were awarded places at a secondary school in New Hampshire. The local community was outraged. The school was attacked; the school house was dragged into a swamp and its three black students were driven out of town.

“Although slavery had been abolished in the Northern states of the US, prejudice and discrimination had not, and anti-slavery opinions were often unpopular,” Meer said. “Crummell and his friend Henry Highland Garnet had spoken at a public anti-slavery meeting, and this may have inflamed the tensions in the town. The experience was deeply shocking, but Crummell and his friends persevered, moving on to a more productive experience at a school in New York.”

Crummell and his family embraced the Episcopal Church. This was significant because it opened connections with Anglicans in Britain, and particularly because the church had strong roots in 19th-century Cambridge.

The episcopal connection would later smooth Crummell’s own path to Cambridge. If he had been a Methodist or a Presbyterian, like many of his classmates, he would not have been able to take a Cambridge degree. He also had a brilliant intellect and formidable determination. But these qualities alone would not have been enough to propel him to university and provide him with the resources he needed to complete a degree.

Crummell would win powerful mentors and sponsors in Britain who arranged preparatory tuition and secured the offer of a place at Queens’ College.

Despite his intelligence, steely determination and connections, Crummell’s path to becoming a minister was far from easy. He was denied admission to the General Theological Seminary in New York and given only unofficial access to classes at Yale Theological Seminary.


WORLD RENOWNED: Cambridge University

Eventually he was ordained, and in 1848 came to Britain to raise funds for his New York church. A group of British evangelicals arranged to sponsor him at Cambridge, organising preparatory training and an interview at Queens’ College, where he joined much younger students as a 30-year-old man, with a wife and three children.
Crummell’s time at Cambridge came at a low point in terms of what the university offered its students. Like others, Crummell would have had scant teaching and would have supplemented lectures with private coaching. Students (men only until 1869) were presumed to be Anglicans and were ranked by the strata of society they came from.

Noblemen, commoners, pensioners and sizars wore different gowns, paid different fees and had different rights. Crummell was a pensioner – one rank up from the sizars who waited on richer students.

Cambridge was, however, an important centre for the anti-slavery movement. Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce both studied at Cambridge – they were influenced among others by the abolitionist Master of Magdalene, Peter Peckard.

Their legacy made Cambridge a receptive environment and Crummell held the university in high regard, writing in 1847 that ‘perhaps no seat of learning in the world… has done more for human liberty and human well-being than this institution’.

Archives of church records and correspondence portray Crummell as a complex, and tricky, character, and his story embodies many contradictions. Despite his passionate championship of black potential, he could see no virtues in traditional African cultures. He made sure that his two daughters received higher education – yet he seems to have treated his first wife with cruel disdain.

“Crummell may have been influenced by the distant and authoritarian teacher and patron figures he encountered as a child, and he was certainly embittered by repeated rejection, as a student, as a priest in training, and later in the posts he applied for,” Meer explains. “He was touchy with colleagues and dictatorial with his family and congregations. And yet, by the end of his life, the younger writer W.E.B. Du Bois was holding up Crummell as an example of grace and forgiveness.”

In Cambridge, Crummell seems to have been a minor celebrity. He met prejudice, but also received affection, and deep sympathy when his four-year-old son died in an accident.

He also remained active outside his studies, working as a curate in Ipswich, and giving anti-slavery lectures all over the country. On leaving Cambridge he spent nearly 20 years in Liberia as a churchman and teacher. He was one of the first professors at Liberia College, which is now the University of Liberia.

On a trip back to New York in 1861, Crummell was greeted by the black paper, The Anglo-African, with the headline ‘A Hearty Welcome Home’, and the paper carefully noted that he was ‘BA of Cambridge University, England’. For a black man, and one of humble origins, to have studied at Cambridge was remarkable and sent a signal to others that top institutions like Cambridge were not utterly beyond reach.

Meer said: “Crummell’s significance, politically and historically, lies in his championship of education, his commitment to freedom and his opposition to materialism.

“His writing on the value of higher education would not look out of place in today’s debates about whether a degree benefits just an individual or a whole society. In today’s environment his views on Christianising Africa would appear Eurocentric and colonialist – yet he made a significant contribution to the development of Liberia, and what he would have called ‘the elevation of his race’.”

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