FACTS ABOUT the 13th District of the AME Church
African Methodism has it’s beginnings in the organization of the Free African
Society in 1787, and in our official organization in 1816 under the auspices of our Founding Father, the Rt. Reverend Richard
Allen.
The roots of our Kentucky/Tennessee Episcopal District, currently the Blessed 13th, finds it’s beginnings
in the ministry and legacy of the Rt. Reverend William Paul Quinn.
As early as 1822 a debate arose in the Baltimore Annual Conference relative to the Western Territories and the
Annual Conference under whose jurisdiction they should be placed. The record refers to it as "the country west of the Allegheny
Mountains." On August 28, 1830, the Western Annual Conference was organized at Hillsboro, Ohio, embracing all the territory
west of the Allegheny Mountains.
In 1833 the Reverend William Paul Quinn was transferred West, and began his great work west of the Alleghenies.
He became, in 1840, one of the founders of the Indiana Conference (whose composition included, at that time, Ohio, Indiana
and Illinois).
That same year (1840), he was given the oversight of, along with his other charges, all the circuits of the
Indiana Conference, and also appointed by the General Conference as the general missionary, to "plant the A. M. E. Church
in the far West." He was the first and the only person at this time to be chosen by a General Conference of the African Methodist
Episcopal Church to do general missionary work.
At the General Conference of 1844, Reverend Quinn reported such an amazing account of growth and organization
in the West, that the mantle of the Bishopric was thrust upon him. Because of his great work, African Methodism continued
it’s movement and growth West, and Southward, into Kentucky, Tennessee and beyond.
In 1852 the General Conference decided that because of the vastness of the Indiana Conference, that it should
be divided.
The Missouri Annual Conference was organized at Louisville, Kentucky in September of 1855, whose composition
included Kentucky and Tennessee.
Again, due to such overwhelming growth, in 1868 the Missouri Conference was divided, and out of that came the
Kentucky Annual Conference and Tennessee Annual Conference (along with others). Both Conferences, at this organization, encompassed
their respective states.
The "increase" continued: In 1876 the Tennessee Conference was divided into the Tennessee and West Tennessee
Conferences.
In 1880 the Kentucky Conference was divided into the Kentucky and West Kentucky Conferences. And, finally, in
1900 the Tennessee Conference was divided into the Tennessee and East Tennessee Conferences. Also, after this last division,
the Tennessee Conference was often referred to as the "Central" Tennessee Conference.
Over the years the regions of Kentucky and Tennessee, and their respective Conferences, have been reassigned
to, and designated by, many different Episcopal District titles as the church has grown and re-organized itself; and during
our history, Kentucky and Tennessee have not always been part of the same District: for example, at the 1872 General Conference,
Kentucky was part of the Third District, while Tennessee was part of the 6th District, and in 1876 Kentucky and Tennessee
were together again, along with other states, to make up the Third District. At the 1920 General Conference, Kentucky and
Tennessee made up the whole 14th District. The mantle of "Thirteenth" was placed upon the regions of Kentucky and Tennessee
at the 1936 General Conference, and it has remained so to this day as our history and legacy get brighter with each new opportunity
to worship and serve the Most High God and the Church of Allen!