Dr. I. B. Scott, Editor of the Southwestern Christian Advocate, 1900Rev. A. E. P. Albert, D. D., Editor of the Southwestern Christian Advocate, 1891.
The Southwestern Christian Advocate (1877–1929)[1] was an American newspaper published by the Methodist Episcopal Church in New Orleans, Louisiana and distributed in the Southern United States. It was an African American newspaper that was also read by the White community more so than any other African American newspaper in the Union.[2]
History
The Advocate was an official publication of the Methodist Episcopal Church,[3] and was printed in New Orleans, Louisiana. The publication targeted a Methodist, and served both an African-American and White audience.[2] It featured a "Lost Friends" section for people searching for loved ones lost to slavery.[4] The newspaper was instrumental in organizing Booker T. Washington's tour of Louisiana in 1915.[5]
^Bennett, James B. (January 21, 2018). ""Until This Curse of Polygamy Is Wiped Out": Black Methodists, White Mormons, and Constructions of Racial Identity in the Late Nineteenth Century". Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation. 21 (2): 167–194. doi:10.1525/rac.2011.21.2.167. JSTOR10.1525/rac.2011.21.2.167.
^Vincent, Charles (1981). "Booker T. Washington's Tour of Louisiana, April, 1915". The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 22 (2): 189–98. JSTOR4232079.