Frederick Ayer

American missionary involved in the creation of Atlanta University
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican missionary involved in the creation of Atlanta University
PlacesUnited States of America
isMissionary
Gender
Male
BirthUxbridge, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Death28 September 1867
The details

Biography

Reverend Frederick Ayer (died 28 September 1867) was a missionary from the American Missionary Association who came to Atlanta, Georgia in 1865 to help set up schools for newly freed slaves (freedmen).

Ayer was born in Uxbridge, Massachusetts; he served as a missionary among Native Americans in Wisconsin and Minnesota from 1843 to 1863, and at that time he started a school in Fort Ripley, Minnesota. When Ayer arrived in Atlanta, he took over the educational work started by freedmen James Tate and Grandison B. Daniels. Tate and Daniels had started the "first school in Atlanta for African American children on the corner of Courtland and Jenkins Streets in a building owned by Bethel A.M.E. Church"; this school would eventually become Atlanta University. Ayer also organized a public school that became Summer Hill School. Ayers died on 28 September 1867.

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