The cemetery next to the church includes the grave of Sgt. Thomas Elzey Polk (1860-1940), who served in the U.S. Army as a Buffalo Soldier during the 1880s. He served in Company Six of the 19th Regiment from 1882 until 1887 and then reenlisted for another five years. Polk was discharged in Leavenworth, Kansas. He was the grandson of Frederick Polk, an enslaved person on the nearby plantation of Judge Frederick Polk. Thomas Elzey Polk’s father, James Morris Polk, had been freed. His mother, Rebecca Caroline Black, was born free.
Friendship United Methodist Church in Allen, Wicomico County
Public records show that between 1830 and 1860, a number of free African Americans purchased property along what is now South Upper Ferry Road, less than a half-mile from and parallel to what had been a Whites-only village. Interestingly, they purchased their property from local White families. The Black community prospered and in 1866, its families founded a Methodist Episcopal Church which they named Friendship (today Friendship United Methodist Church).
The church became part of the Delaware Conference of the ME Church, made up only of Black congregations, which had been organized in 1864. Prior to the construction of the church, enslaved people worshipped in the gallery of nearby Asbury ME Church, as well as in the sheep barn of farmer Bob Jones, according to local oral history. The present building dates to 1893, but was enlarged in 1907. The church continues to have an active congregation. Across the street is the building that served as the African American school from 1895 to 1955, when the Board of Education sold it to Friendship church for an educational building as well as for social events.
In terms of residential living and community activities, the Allen community is racially integrated today; however, the two United Methodist Churches continue to be divided along racial lines.
Source and photos:
George Shivers, Changing Times: Chronicle of Allen, MD, an Eastern Shore Village. Baltimore: Gateway Press, 1998
A native of Wicomico County, George Shivers holds a doctorate from the University of Maryland and taught in the Foreign Language Dept. of Washington College for 38 years before retiring in 2007. He is also very interested in the history and culture of the Eastern Shore, African American history in particular.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore




