The Reverend James Newton Gloucester was an African-American clergyman and businessman who was a supporter of abolitionistJohn Brown.[1][2] Gloucester lived at 265 Bridge Street, Brooklyn, New York.
Like his father, Gloucester was a Black Presbyterian pastor. In 1849 he founded Siloam Presbyterian Church. He and his church members were very active in the Underground Railroad.
Gloucester was also a friend and associate of John Brown. Two letters he wrote to Brown are still extant.[3]
^James N. Gloucester to John Brown, February 19, 1858 and J. N. Gloucester to John Brown, March 9, 1858. C. Peter Ripley, ed., The Black Abolitionist Papers, volume 4 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1991), 377-379