Joseph Willis

Joseph Willis was an early 19th-century minister who has been described by some historians as the "father of the Baptist religion in Louisiana".

Willis, a freedman from North Carolina,[1] was born in 1758[1] and appeared in Louisiana as early as 1798. He was the son of an Englishman, Agerton Willis,[1] and a Cherokee slave. His first church mission failed, but he redoubled his efforts and was rewarded with a successful congregation in Opelousas, the seat of St. Landry Parish.

In 1810, Willis sent a petition to the Mississippi Baptist Association and requested ordination. He was ordained in 1812 by two Baptist laymen known only as "Hadley" and "Scarborough". He remained in Opelousas, held in high esteem by Baptists of both races, according to the historian of the American South, Joe Gray Taylor (1920–1987) of McNeese State University in Lake Charles.

References

  1. Randy, Willis (2014). Twice a Slave. SamRan Publishing LLC. ISBN 978-0990371748.
  • "Joseph Willis", A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, Vol. 2 (1988), p. 853
  • O'Neill, Charles Edwards, et al. Louisiana: a History
  • Gayarré, Charles. History of Louisiana
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