John Telemachus Hilton was an African-American abolitionist who established barber, furniture dealer and employment agency businesses. He was a Prince Hall Mason and established the Prince Hall National Grand Lodge of North America and served as its first National Grand Master for ten years. He also was a founding member of the Massachusetts General Colored Association, and active member and author in the Anti-Slavery movement. Both John T. Hilton and his wife, Lavinia Hilton, were active in the Anti-Slavery and Temperance Societies.
Early life
John Telemachus Hilton was born in 1801 in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Hilton traveled to Boston at the age of 17 and married nineteen-year-old Lavinia M. Ames on April 1, 1825, in Boston; they would have three sons and two daughters. By 1830, John T. Hilton had a storefront for a hairdressing shop; the store also included his employment agency, retail sales, furniture commission sales and local event ticket sales.
Hilton wrote An Address, Delivered Before the African Grand Lodge of Boston, No. 459, June 24, 1828, by John T. Hilton: On the Annual Festival, of St. John the Baptist " and Thomas Dalton and David Walker oversaw its publication.
Massachusetts General Colored Association
Hilton and other Prince Hall Freemasons were founding members of the Massachusetts General Colored Association. The organization was said to have had "among its leaders the most spirited and intelligent colored citizens of Boston."
By 1838, Hilton was the president of the New England Temperance Society of Colored Americans; His wife Lavina was the treasurer of the women's group.
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Marriage and family
Hilton and his wife, Lavinia, were both members of the African Baptist Church. Mrs. Hilton was a member of the female Anti-Slavery Society. At least for the period between 1848 and 1851, Hilton lived at 3 Second Street in the 5th Ward of Boston; He worked as a barber. Their eldest daughter, Lavinia L. Hilton, attended the Exclusive School in Beacon Hill and the Alumni Grammar School in Cambridge. Lavinia assisted her father in his Anti-Slavery efforts by handing out handbills for the Boston Vigilance Committee. She married John M. Lenox and lived in Waltham, Massachusetts: "She and her husband did much to dispel prejudice in that place, and to increase the antislavery sentiment there existing." An ancestor of Lavinia Ames Hilton was Prince Ames, a Revolutionary War soldier who served at Bunker Hill.