1865 | Founding of Fisk University |
17 December 1874 | Birth of Althea Brown in Russellville, Alabama |
1876 | Founding of Stillman Institute |
19 July 1879 | Birth of Alonzo Edmiston in Petersburg, Tennessee |
1881 | Founding of Tuskegee Institute |
18841885 | King Leopold II claims sole control of the Congo Free State during the Berlin Conference |
1891 | William Henry Sheppard and Samuel Lapsley found the American Presbyterian Congo Mission |
Congo Free State officials receive a decree to raise revenue from rubber and ivory as their foremost priority |
1892 | Althea Brown enters Fisk University |
1895 | The rubber harvesting industry starts to flourish in the Congo Free State |
Ca. 1898 | Alonzo Edmiston enters Stillman Institute |
1898 | The Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS) establishes a separate Afro-American Presbyterian Church |
William Henry Sheppard founds the Ibanche mission station |
18991900 | William Morrison and William Henry Sheppard start reporting evidence of human rights abuses in the Congo Free State |
1901 | Althea Brown graduates from Fisk University and attends the Chicago Training School for City and Foreign Missions |
Ca. 19011902 | Alonzo Edmiston graduates from the Stillman Institute seminary and enters Tuskegee Institute |
1902 | Althea Brown arrives at the American Presbyterian Congo Mission |
1904 | E. D. Morel founds the Congo Reform Association Alonzo Edmiston arrives at the Congo Mission |
November 1904 | The Ibanche station is destroyed during the Kuba revolt |
8 July 1905 | Althea Brown weds Alonzo Edmiston and they return to Ibanche |
1905 | Alonzo Edmiston starts directing the Ibanche Industrial School |
26 May 1906 | Birth of Sherman Kueta Edmiston |
1908 | Althea Brown departs on furlough; Alonzo Edmiston resigns from the Congo Mission under controversial circumstances |
Political transition from the Congo Free State to the Belgian Congo |
1909 | William Morrison and William Henry Sheppard testify against the Compagnie du Kasai rubber trade at a libel trial |
1910 | William Henry Sheppard and Lucy Gantt Sheppard depart from the Congo Mission |
August 1910 | The Secretary of the PCUS Executive Committee on Foreign Missions recommends unannounced restrictions on future appointments of African American missionaries |
Ca. 1911 | The Edmistons return to the Congo Mission at Ibanche |
27 May 1913 | Birth of Alonzo Leaucourt Bope Edmiston |
19141916 | The Edmistons relocate to Luebo; Alonzo Edmiston works on the Hillhouse cotton plantation |
1916 | Black southern Presbyterian congregations are reorganized from the Afro-American Presbyterian Church to the segregated Snedecor Memorial Synod |
1917 | Beginning of the state-mandated cotton planting industry in the Belgian Congo |
19181919 | Alonzo Edmiston manages the Agricultural College at Luebo |
1921 | Althea Brown Edmiston delivers the Fisk University commencement address |
1922 | Althea Brown Edmiston and Alonzo Edmiston are reassigned to the Mutoto mission station and Boys School |
1922 and 1925 | Publication of the Phelps-Stokes Fund reports regarding industrial education on the African continent |
1926 | The Belgian government commends Alonzo Edmiston for his agricultural service |
1932 | Publication of Althea Brown Edmistons Grammar and Dictionary of the Bushonga or Bukuba Language as Spoken by the Bushonga or Bukuba Tribe Who Dwell in the Upper Kasai District, Belgian Congo, Central Africa |
The Congo Protestant Council recommends conformity to the Belgian Congo State Educational Program, including agricultural training |
19351936 | Althea Brown and Alonzo Edmiston return to Selma, Alabama, during their final furlough and reside with the civil rights activists Samuel and Amelia Boynton |
9 June 1937 | Death of Althea Brown Edmiston at the Mutoto Station |
19391940 | Alonzo Edmiston retires and departs the Congo Mission |
5 December 1954 | Death of Alonzo Edmiston in Selma, Alabama |
1960 | Political transition from the Belgian Congo to the Democratic Republic of the Congo |
1964 | The PCUS Board of World Missions endorses a missionary petition against racial segregation in the United States |
1965 | Amelia Boynton Robinson and other Selma activists organize protest marches for voting rights |