Neha Patil (Editor)

Lena Doolin Mason

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Nationality
  
American

Occupation
  
ministry

Known for
  
Colored Conference

Education
  
Douglass High School

Years active
  
1887-1924

Died
  
1924

Lena Doolin Mason httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbc

Born
  
1864
Quincy, Illinois

Similar
  
Charles H Pearce, Daniel Payne, Robert Meacham

Lena Doolin Mason (May 6, 1864 – August 28, 1924) was an American Methodist preacher and poet.

Biography

Lena Doolin was born on May 6, 1864 in Quincy, Illinois to Von Phul and Cerilda Doolin. She joined the congregation of Hannibal, Missouri's African Methodist Episcopal Church in 1972. She attended Douglass High School in Hannibal and Professor Knott's School in Chicago. In 1883, she married George Mason. Their daughter was the only one of their six children to survive to adulthood. When she was 23, Mason entered the ministry, preaching exclusively to white people for her first three years.

Mason was a noted orator. During her career, she was a member of the Colored Conference and preached in "nearly every state in the Union."

Mason also wrote songs and composed poetry. Only two of her poems are extant, "A Negro in It," written in response to the Assassination of William McKinley, and "The Negro in Education." For the latter poem, she subverted the standard pro-slavery argument that education makes people unfit to be slaves.

References

Lena Doolin Mason Wikipedia