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After graduation, Booker moved back to
Arkansas to work as a Baptist minister. On August 22, 1886, he was ordained as a Baptist minister and was appointed by the State Missionary for the Arkansas Negro Baptist Convention and the American Baptist Missionary Society as minister for the “No. 2” Baptist
165:(1859–1926), was an American newspaper editor, academic administrator, educator, minister, activist, and Black community leader. He was born into slavery and orphaned at a young age; Booker went on to serve as the president of
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plantation. When he was one year old, his mother Mary died. His father Albert died when he was three years old, and he is said to have been whipped to death for teaching the other enslaved people to read.
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around 1865, young Booker was placed in the care of his maternal grandmother, Emma Fisher. He was enrolled in some of the earliest public schools that were integrated and allowed Black students.
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In 1887, he was appointed as the first president of the newly established
Arkansas Baptist College. He remained president of the college until his death in 1926.
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Booker was one of the leaders in the Black community’s opposition to the
Separate Coach Law of 1891, Arkansas' law requiring
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Newspaper editor, college president, academic administrator, educator, Baptist minister, activist, Black community leader
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251:. In 1881, he moved to Nashville, Tennessee, to attend the Nashville Normal and Theological Institute (later known as
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286:) was an Arkansas Baptist College newspaper, and Booker served as the managing editor starting in the fall of 1887.
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In 1887, Booker married Mary Jane Caver, someone he met at Roger
Williams University; and they had eight children.
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He died of a heart attack on
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Pegues, Albert
Witherspoon (1892). "Rev. Joseph Albert Booker, AM".
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At the age of either 16 or 17 years old, he became a teacher on the
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at
Arkansas Agricultural, Mechanical, and Normal College (now the
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in Fort Worth, Texas. A profile of him is included in the books
461:"Arkansas Baptist College, Little Rock, Arkansas (1884– )"
515:(c. 1911) from the Persistence of the Spirit collection,
407:"Rev. Joseph A. Booker, A. B., Editor Baptist Vanguard"
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and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in May 1886.
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Punchardt) and Albert Booker, both were enslaved by
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196:on December 26, 1859, in Old Portland in
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445:. Willey & Company. pp. 61–66.
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567:African-American Baptist ministers
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374:"Joseph Albert Booker (1859–1926)"
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602:People from Little Rock, Arkansas
513:Image of the Joseph Booker family
509:, Central Arkansas Library System
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552:American civil rights activists
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592:Editors of Arkansas newspapers
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405:Penn, Irvine Garland (1891).
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