AFRICAN MEETING HOUSE
200th Anniversary
Bicentennial Celebration

EXHIBIT ON VIEW

2008 LIVING LEGENDS AWARD GALA

SHOP AT OUR MUSEUM STORE

UPCOMING EVENTS

TAKE THE BLACK HERITAGE TRAIL®

Become a Member Online!
Visit our membership page and sign up today!

 

 


Site 4
John J. Smith House
86 Pinckney Street

Image: John SmithBorn free in Richmond, Virginia, on November 2, 1820, John J. Smith moved to Boston at the age of twenty-eight. Smith went West for the 1849 California Gold Rush but returned to Boston no richer than when he left.

He became a barber and set up a shop on the corner of Howard and Bulfinch Streets. His shop was a center for abolitionist activity and a rendezvous point for fugitive slaves. When abolitionist Senator Charles Sumner was not at his home or office, he was usually found at Smith's shop.

During the Civil War, Smith stationed himself in Washington, D.C., as a recruiting officer for the all-black 5th Cavalry. After the war, Smith was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1868, 1869 and 1872. In 1878, the year he moved to this house, he was appointed to the Boston Common Council.

John J. Smith lived at 86 Pinckney Street until 1893. He died on November 4, 1906.

Photo credit: Massachusetts Historical Society

Next: Charles Street Meeting House

BackbackBlack Heritage Trail®Image: footstepsNext