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・ Amos Morrill
・ Amos Morris
・ Amos Morse House
・ Amos Mosaner
・ Amos Moses
・ Amos Moss
・ Amos Myers
・ Amos N. Guiora
・ Amos N. Wilson
・ Amos Neheysi
・ Amos Norcott
・ Amos Northup
・ Amos Norton Craft
・ Amos Nourse
・ Amos Noyes Currier
Amos Noë Freeman
・ Amos Nzeyi
・ Amos Omeje
・ Amos Ori
・ Amos Otis
・ Amos Owens
・ Amos Oz
・ Amos P. Catlin
・ Amos P. Cutting
・ Amos P. Godby High School
・ Amos P. Granger
・ Amos Palmer House (Langhorne, Pennsylvania)
・ Amos Palmer House (Stonington, Connecticut)
・ Amos Pentz
・ Amos Perley


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Amos Noë Freeman : ウィキペディア英語版
Amos Noë Freeman

Amos Noë Freeman (1809—1893) was an African-American abolitionist, Presbyterian minister and educator. He was the first full-time minister of Abyssinian Congregational Church in Portland, Maine, where he led a station on the Underground Railroad, and served for decades at Siloam Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn, New York.
==Early life and education==
Amos Noë Freeman was born in Rahway, New Jersey. He was orphaned and raised within the church from an early age. As a child, he was sent to attend the African Free School in Manhattan, then matriculated to Phoenix High School in New York City, established by his mentor Rev. Theodore Sedgewick Wright.
Freeman returned to his native New Jersey to attend Rahway Academy, and later transferred to the Oneida Institute in Whitesboro, New York. It had recently been founded by radical Presbyterian minister, Rev. Beriah Green. Freeman was one of four African Americans in the first year class of 33; others were Amos Beman, who became a good friend; Alexander Crummell, and Henry Highland Garnet.〔(Swift (1989), ''Black Prophets of Justice'' ), p. 178〕 Upon graduating from Oneida Institute in the early 1830s, Freeman moved back to New Jersey, first to New Brunswick, then Newark, to teach in the Colored public schools.

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