Brothers Francis and Archibald Grimké.

Brothers Francis and Archibald Grimké.

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Francis James Grimké is buried at the National Harmony Memorial Park Cemetery, Hyattsville, Maryland.

Francis James Grimké is buried at the National Harmony Memorial Park Cemetery, Hyattsville, Maryland.

Suffer Them To Come Unto Me (1879)

Our Duty To the Poor — How We Observed It on Christmas (1881)

Wendell Phillips: A Sermon Delivered Sunday, Feb. 24, 1884, at the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C. (1884)

Obituary Address of Rev. F.J. Grimke in Honor of Wiley Lane (1885)

Colored Men as Professors in Colored Institutions (1885)

The Defects of Our Ministry, and the Remedy (1886)

Earnest Words From a Colored Missionary (1887)

The Secret of Power in the Pulpit (1887)

The Pulpit in Relation to Race Elevation (1887)

Rev. Frank J. Grimke, A.B. (1887)

It is Drawing the Color Line (1888)

Introduction to D.A. Payne’s Recollections of Seventy Years (1888)

Our Future as a People (1890)

The Anglo-American Pulpit and Southern Outrages (1893)

Memorial Sermon for Frederick Douglass (1895, 1897)

A Passing Thought (1895)

Some Things That Lie Across the Pathway of Our Progress (1897)

Introduction to Matthew Anderson’s Presbyterianism: Its Relation to the Negro (1897)

The Negro Will Never Acquiesce as Long as He Lives (1898)

The Negro: His Rights and Wrongs, The Forces For Him and Against Him (1898)

Recommendations of the Committee on Religion and Ethics (1899)

The Lynching of Negroes in the South: Its Causes and Remedy (1899)

Some Lessons From the Assassination of President William McKinley (1901)

The Roosevelt-Washington Episode; or, Race Prejudice (1901)

A Resemblance and a Contrast Between the American Negro and the Children of Israel in Egypt, or the Duty of the Negro to Contend Earnestly for His Rights Guaranteed Under the Constitution (1902)

The Signs of a Brighter Future For the American Negro (1902)

God and the Race Problem: A Discourse (1903)

An Argument Against the Union of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church and the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America (1904)

The Negro and His Citizenship (1905)

The Atlanta Riot: A Discourse (1906)

The Progress and Development of the Colored People of Our Nation (1908)

Equality of Rights for All Citizens, Black and White, Alike: A Discourse Delivered in the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C., Sunday, March 7th, 1909 (1909)

Christianity and Race Prejudice: Two Discourses (1910)

Gideon Bands For Work Within the Race and For Work Without the Race: A Message to the Colored People of the United States (1913)

Fifty Years of Freedom: With Matters of Vital Importance to Both the White and Colored People of the United States (1913)

The Protest of a Colored Minister (1914)

The Logic of Woman Suffrage (1915)

“The Birth of a Nation” (1915)

Evangelism (1916)

Some Reflections, Growing Out of the Recent Epidemic of Influenza That Afflicted Our City: A Discourse (1918)

Theodore Roosevelt: An Address Delivered in the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C., February 9th, 1919 (1919)

Address of Welcome Given at a Reception Tendered to the Men Who Have Returned From the Battle Front by the Men’s Progressive Club of the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, April 24, 1919 (1919)

The Race Problem — Two Suggestions as to Its Solution (1919)

Justice and the Colored Man (1919)

The Next Step in Racial Cooperation: A Discourse Delivered in the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C., November 20, 1921 (1921)

Segregation (1934)

The Second Marriage of Frederick Douglass (1934)

The Battle Must Go On (1934)

Valiant Men and Free (1934)

The Negro’s Attitude Toward Religion (1934)

Our Young People! How To Deal With Them (1935)

Communications (1936)

Francis James Grimké (1938)

The Works of Francis J. Grimke, Vol. 1 (1942)

The Works of Francis J. Grimke, Vol. 2 (1942)

The Works of Francis J. Grimke, Vol. 3 (1942)

The Works of Francis J. Grimke, Vol. 4 (1942)

Francis James Grimké (1850-1937) (1963)


Courtesy of Daniel Kleven.

This article, believed to be written by Charlotte Forten Grimké, includes the substance of a sermon by Francis J. Grimké.

A transcription of this sermon by Daniel Kleven is available here.

Courtesy of Daniel Kleven.

This article appeared in the October 1885 issue of the A.M.E. Church Review. See more about this article at Daniel Kleven’s page here.

This article appeared in the July 22, 1886 issue of The Independent. See more about this article, including a transcription, on Daniel Kleven’s page here.

This article appeared in the October 1886 issue of the A.M.E. Church Review. See more about this article on Daniel Kleven’s page here.

This article appeared in an 1887 issue of the A.M.E. Church Review. See more about this article at Daniel Kleven’s page here.

This article appeared in an 1887 issue of the A.M.E. Church Review. See more about this article at Daniel Kleven’s page here.

Also appended is a report, to which Rev. Grimké contributed, by the Committee on Resolutions at the First General Hampton Negro Conference.

This sermon appeared in the November 26, 1898 issues of The Richmond (Va0 Planet.

Included are two letters from Francis J. Grimké dated August 23, 1934 and November 20, 1935.