Big August Quarterly


Big August Quarterly is an annual religious festival held in Wilmington, Delaware. Begun in 1814 by Peter Spencer in connection with the "quarterly" meeting of the African Union Church—of the four meetings during the year, the one in August became the "annual conference" of the Church when ministers' assignments for the next year were announced, among other business—it was a time for free blacks and slaves alike to come together and celebrate their faith with singing, dancing, testifying, and feasting. It is the oldest such celebration in the country.
The August Quarterly became a kind of Independence Day for Black people on the Delmarva Peninsula. In the early years of the festival “abolitionists and Underground Railroad conductors of the stature of Thomas Garrett and Harriet Tubman were often in the Wilmington area to assist slaves who chose to escape”. The Big Quarterly has remained a time of reunion, religious revival and celebration of freedom for the people in and around Wilmington, Delaware.
The August Quarterly points to the struggle for freedom in all human forms and away from the elements of history that need not be repeated. Enslavement of any race of people need not be repeated. People not being able to worship GOD in the way they want need not be repeated. People being divided and separated by class and status need not be repeated. Simply put, August Quarterly is the anti-thesis to bondage, captivity and religious oppression. It is summarized in the major themes of the preaching, proclamation and ministry of the founder: community, hope, salvation, self-determination and liberation.