Alexander Worthy Clerk | |
---|---|
Born | 4 March 1820 |
Died | 11 February 1906 | (aged 85)
Nationality | |
Education | Fairfield Teachers' Seminary |
Occupations | |
Spouse | Pauline Hesse (m. 1848) |
Children | 12, including Nicholas |
Relatives |
|
Church | |
Offices held | 1st Deacon, Christ Presbyterian Church, Akropong |
Orders | |
Ordination | Basel Mission, 1 September 1872, Gold Coast |
Consecration | Fairfield Moravian Church, 1842 |
Alexander Worthy Clerk (4 March 1820[1][2][3] – 11 February 1906[4][5][6]) was a Jamaican Moravian pioneer missionary, teacher and clergyman who arrived in 1843 in the Danish Protectorate of Christiansborg, now Osu in Accra, Ghana, then known as the Gold Coast.[7][8][9] He was part of the first group of 24 West Indian missionaries from Jamaica and Antigua who worked under the aegis of the Basel Evangelical Missionary Society of Switzerland.[10][11][12] Caribbean missionary activity in Africa fit into the broader "Atlantic Missionary Movement" of the diaspora between the 1780s and the 1920s.[1][13][14] Shortly after his arrival in Ghana, the mission appointed Clerk as the first Deacon of the Christ Presbyterian Church, Akropong, founded by the first Basel missionary survivor on the Gold Coast, Andreas Riis in 1835, as the organisation's first Protestant church in the country.[13] Alexander Clerk is widely acknowledged and regarded as one of the pioneers of the precursor to the Presbyterian Church of Ghana. As a leader in education in colonial Ghana, he designed curriculum and pedagogy, co-establishing with fellow educators, George Peter Thompson and Catherine Mulgrave, an all-male boarding middle school, the Salem School at Osu in 1843.[15] In 1848, Clerk was an inaugural faculty member at the Basel Mission Seminary, Akropong, now known as the Presbyterian College of Education, where he was an instructor in Biblical studies.[13] The Basel missionaries founded the Akropong seminary and normal school to train teacher-catechists in service of the mission.[13][16] The college is the second oldest higher educational institution in early modern West Africa after Fourah Bay College in Freetown, Sierra Leone which was established in 1827.[16] Clerk was the father of Nicholas Timothy Clerk (1862 – 1961), a Basel-trained theologian, who was elected the first Synod Clerk of the Presbyterian Church of the Gold Coast from 1918 to 1932[7] and co-founded the all boys' boarding high school, the Presbyterian Boys' Secondary School established in 1938.[17] A. W. Clerk was also the progenitor of the historically important Clerk family from the suburb of Osu in Accra.[18][19]
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