Most Congregational and Anglican churches in New England were multiracial during 1730 to 1749. In churches across Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts (including parts of Maine), and southern New Hampshire, blacks and Indians not only attended, but some were also baptized and accepted as members. In at least 121 Congregational churches, blacks and/or Indians affiliated as members or by being baptized between 1730 and 1749.33 These Congregational churches were led by pastors who embraced the new methods of Whitefieldarian revivalism, pastors who consistently opposed Whitefield and other itinerant preachers, and pastors who first embraced the awakenings but later lessened or reversed their support for the religious changes swelling across New England in the early 1740s. Incomplete church records and inconsistent racial notations in some original and transcribed records make estimating the number of congregations that did not baptize multiple black people difficult. For Massachusetts’s Congregational churches, my sample of church records included fourteen congregations whose records did not have multiple, identifiable black baptisms between 1730 and 1749.34
While some congregations in New England baptized only one or two blacks in a decade, other congregations baptized ten in a year. Since baptism usually occurred only once in a person’s life and since blacks constituted only a small portion of the population of rural New England towns, even a few black baptisms were significant in this context. Though blacks and Indians were most prevalent in the churches of port towns or communities located near Indian land reserves, they also appeared across areas settled by Europeans. Because so many Congregational and Anglican churches in New England baptized blacks and because social conventions encouraged widespread church attendance, almost all New England churches likely included black attendees at weekly worship services.35
In New England, both Anglican and Congregational churches had at least pretentions toward being established churches, and as religious establishments in these colonies, they sought to entail and represent the entirety of colonial society. Anglican parishes, of course, were part of the Church of England, the legally established form of Protestantism in England, but they did not receive tax support and were not prevalent enough across New England to fully constitute an established church there. Congregational churches were dissenters from the Church of England and therefore were not officially an established church (in Scotland, the Presbyterian Kirk was officially established). However, Congregational churches across New England received tax support and functioned, at least for public worship, as all-encompassing parishes.
Congregationalists were the most numerous and influential Christians in New England. Nearly every village, town, and city in Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire had one or more Congregational church. Rhode Island was more heterogeneous than any other part of New England, with greater numbers of Baptists, Quakers, and Jews, but it still had Congregational churches and a few Anglican churches. Church buildings across most of New England were known as meetinghouses, and they served as the setting for local government. These churches were outgrowths of seventeenth-century Puritan churches, and they still maintained moderate to strict forms of Reformed Christianity (Calvinism). As the main public establishment in many towns, Congregational churches often sought to be relatively accessible to all nearby inhabitants. Congregationalists believed that every person in each town, regardless of social position, should attend weekly church services. Ministers’ understanding of the Bible and their desire to make godly societies inclined them to include all people in their congregations, but not every person who attended church services was considered a church member. Ministers encouraged people whose “godly walk” or “conversation” was consistent with their profession to join their church as a member.36
Most Congregational churches had two levels of membership: full members, who could take communion and vote in church affairs, and so-called “halfway members,” who could not do these two things (many of the congregations most affected by the awakenings dropped owning the covenant and “halfway” membership in the 1740s). Both types of members could be baptized and have their children and other young household members baptized. They were also both subject to church discipline. The halfway members joined by “owning the covenant,” attesting to a statement of faith, which was easier than the process of becoming a full member. Full or communing members usually had to share their profession of Reformed doctrine or their relation that attested to their personal experience of God’s work of salvation in their life. These professions or relations were usually shared with the pastor and existing church members, who determined whether to admit each person or not. Some congregations had relatively accessible membership rolls while other congregations sought to restrict membership, as much as possible, to the truly converted. Many regular attendees and devout parishioners in Congregational churches waited a long time—or refrained entirely—from fully joining their church because they were concerned about or feared taking communion in an unworthy manner.37
Despite its limitations, owning the covenant or halfway membership provided a formal place in church life and the community, and not a few blacks and Indians owned the covenant to received baptism. The original intention of the Halfway Covenant was not to provide a means for blacks or Indians to affiliate with churches, but by the 1740s, these people often affiliated with churches through this more accessible process. Servant or slave children could be baptized if their masters were members or halfway members—just as though the servant children were biological children. For example, on September 6, 1741, the First Congregational Church of Windsor, Connecticut, baptized a black person named John when he owned the covenant for himself and another named London, on account of his master’s profession. In most cases, masters who had enslaved children baptized on their account were full members.38
Though Church of England parishes in New England were few in number compared to the Congregational churches, the wealth of some parishioners and their location in port towns made them more influential than their numbers imply. Many Church of England parishioners were slaveholders who encouraged their slaves to come to church. At the very least, blacks were baptized at Anglican churches in Portsmouth, New Hampshire; Newburyport and Marblehead, Massachusetts; Boston’s three Anglican churches; and Rhode Island’s four oldest Anglican churches between 1730 and 1749. Some of these congregations also included Indians.39 At Trinity Church in Newport, Rhode Island, fifty-seven people were identified as “negro,” and two people were identified as “Indian” in the baptismal records of this era. In 1746, this church was described as a “large and increasing congregation, not of whites alone, but of blacks also; no less than twelve of the latter sort having been admitted members of it, by the holy sacrament of baptism, within twelve