The following link is to a video on Rev. Pastor John B. Meachum taken at the Bellefontaine Cemetery where John Meachum and his wife are buried. I also have a video on this blog about Rev. Meachum where I am reading from This Day in Baptist History for May 3.
‘Bellefontaine Cemetery and Arboretum is a key cultural institution in St. Louis, offering visitors a beautiful atmosphere for exploring history, art, architecture, and nature. We have a 3.7-mile newly painted white line to follow while in your car, on your bike, or on foot for your own self-guided tour. An interactive map is available on our website, or you can find a paper copy outside of our office doors highlighting 38 historic stops along the white line.
Stop 24 on the white line tour belongs to Reverend John Berry Meachum, founder and pastor of First African Baptist Church in St. Louis, the oldest continuously operating black church in Missouri. John and his wife Mary established a school for free and enslaved Black students in the basement of their church. Disguised as a Sunday school, the school became known as the “Candle Tallow School.” In 1847, the state of Missouri banned education for all Black people–free or enslaved–and the police forced the Meachums to shut down their school. John and Mary then moved their classes to a steamboat in the middle of the Mississippi River, which was beyond the reach of Missouri law. They provided the school with a library, desks, and chairs, and called it the “Freedom School.”
The Meachum’s used proceeds from John’s carpentry and barrel-making business to purchase freedom for twenty enslaved individuals. Their home on Fourth Street in St. Louis was a safe house on the Underground Railroad. John and Mary also helped slaves escape to Illinois, where slavery was outlawed. Their work involved considerable risk due to the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, a law that authorized the hunting and capture of escaped slaves and required that they be returned to their masters.’
The Conversation is a Marxist leaning news outlet. Nevertheless, sometimes it is good to read an article from them just to know what the Marxists are up to. Here in Australia the Labor Party is in charge of the nation. Their agenda seems to be a Capitalist/Marxist (CCP) way of doing things. On the Labor Party’s agenda is to ruin the electricity grid via renewables. These renewables require huge amounts of tax dollar subsidies that will have to be paid for by future tax paying Australians. Presently, China is the world’s largest producer of solar panels and I have heard they have a glut of them which they are selling to Australia and other nations at basement prices. Well that doesn’t defer the Labor Party from throwing ONE BILLION tax payer dollars at a solar manufacturing company here in Australia in spite of the glut of Chinese solar panels!
Now, I have ranted long enough so here is that article from The Conversation telling us what the CCP/Marxist Labor Party of Australia is doing for Australia in manufacturing. This will not end well.
‘Author and educator, Dr. Kevin Donnelly, has spoken out vehemently against what he perceives as the insidious influence of cancel culture and cultural Marxism on Australian society.
In a new interview in Brisbane, Dr. Donnelly delved into the themes of his latest book, “Cancel Culture: And The Left’s Long March.”
A native of Melburnian, Dr. Donnelly reflected on Labor’s Joan Kirner era and her socialist agenda in education, which he witnessed firsthand.
He highlighted Kirner’s push for the overthrow of traditional educational values in favour of a socialist paradigm, advocating for equality of outcomes over competition and meritocracy.
Drawing on his extensive research, Dr. Donnelly elaborated on the concept of the Long March through the institutions, popularised by German activist Rudi Dutschke, wherein Marxist academics sought to instill cultural Marxism in Western societies.
His book explores the roots of cancel culture, political correctness, and t modern form “wokeness,” decrying their corrosive effects on various facets of society.
Expressing his dismay at the current state of affairs, Dr. Donnelly lamented the pervasive influence of cancel culture, particularly its impact on the youth.
He recounted distressing scenes of young children succumbing to fear-induced despair over climate change, attributing such sentiments to the toxic environment fostered by cancel culture.
Moreover, Dr. Donnelly underscored the concerning rise in youth suicide, self-harm, and other mental health issues in Australia, attributing them to a lack of moral and spiritual grounding.