Johnston Memorial Library, Virginia State University
Special Collections and Archives© 2002 By the Board of Visitors of Virginia State University.
Funding: Funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Processed by: Lucious Edwards Jr.
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Papers of Rev. Mr. George Freeman Bragg, 1882-1925, Accession #1942-18, Special Collections and Archives, Johnston Memorial Library, Virginia State University, Petersburg, VA.
The Reverend Mr. George Freeman Bragg was born in Warrenton, North Carolina on January 23, 1863 to George Freeman Bragg Sr., and Mary Bragg. Mr. Bragg's parents moved to Petersburg, Virginia when he was an infant. George was reared in Petersburg and attended school at The St. Stephens Normal School and The Bishop Payne Divinity School in Petersburg, Virginia where he studied theology. In 1887 George Freeman was appointed deacon and in 1888 appointed a priest. While pastoring Bragg built a church and rectory for the St. James First African Church in Baltimore, Maryland. Rev Bragg increased the membership of the church from thirty to nearly a hundred. At the age of 19 Bragg published the first " Colored" newspaper The Lancet . The Lancet was designed to be an organ of reform in Virginia and the Rev Mr. Bragg was an ardent supporter of William Mahone and the Readjuster Party. Mr. Bragg became the first African American Page in the Virginia Legislator. He also published two other newspapers The Church Advocate and the Afro-American Churchman . Rev Mr. Bragg published his own newspapers and books with his own press and he taught typesetting to his sons. The Rev Mr. Bragg became widely known for his championing of civil rights and leadership in a wide array of community service. In 1887 Mr. Bragg married Nellie Hill.
In the Afro-American Churchman and The Church Advocate , The Rev Mr. Bragg provides the only record of the development of the black Episcopal Church in America. The Newspapers are unique and reflect the current political and social views of the African American Episcopal Church at that time. Here one may find articles written by some of the leading African Americans of the time. Topics about the "Negro Problem", Liberia, and "Jim Crowism," are some of the issues addressed.
SERIES I. CORRESPONDENCE, 1912-1925
Mostly consisting of correspondence regarding church
matters and social issues.
SERIES II: WRITINGS, 1916, n.d.
A number of writings, some may have been presented as
speeches. The topics address religious and social issues.
Included in this series is a pamphlet published by Bragg
entitled Richard Allen and Absodom Jones. Included in this
collection are also a number of books.
SERIES III. PHOTOGRAPHS
Two Photos of George Freeman Bragg
SERIES IV. PRINTED MATERIALS
A.
Broadside, Programs
Two items: Broadside Concerns a social outing in 1899
the program; a conference in Norfolk, Virginia ca 1888.
B.
Newspapers
George Freeman Bragg edited and published at least three
newspapers during his lifetime. His first newspaper was
published in Petersburg, Virginia from 1882-1886 and was
titled the
Lanceted . The Rev. Mr. Bragg
relocated to Baltimore, Maryland and there he published both
The African American
Churchman beginning in 1886 and the
Church Advocate in 1891-
1917.
Mostly consisting of correspondence regarding church matters and social issues.