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Father Moses Berry, Prominent Missouri Faith Leader and Museum Founder, Passes Away – Black Enterprise



Despite his focus on his Missouri hometown, Father Moses Berry became known nationwide, with the New York Times describing him as a ‘one-man racial reconciliation committee.’


On Jan. 12, Father Moses Berry died in hospice care after being hospitalized for months. As KSMU reported, Berry, who was in his early 70s, was a prominent member of the Missouri faith community, culminating in the creation of the Ozarks Afro-American Heritage Museum. In a 2003 interview on the Ozarks Public Television program OzarksWatch, Berry told the program viewers what spurred him to start the museum, “All of our friends encouraged us to start a museum. Well, we weren’t quite ready to do that, but I’m always moved by the African-American proverb that says ‘start before you’re ready.’“

Through 2013, Berry curated the museum, which chronicled the history of the town where he was born and the place where his ancestors lived. The collection has now been digitized by Father Berry’s daughter, Dorothy Berry, and features artifacts some of which go back to the 1830s. The collection includes quilts, furniture, portraits, horse equipment and toys which serve to paint a picture of Black American life, family traditions, and rural life. The collection also contains some of the constraints of life for enslaved people, including ankle chains, screw locks, and neck irons. 

Berry described the material conditions of enslavement as part of that 2003 interview, saying, “Well, I have this collection of manacles and shackles and ball and chain from the slave era of our country. This particular piece is, you know, called neck iron. It goes on like this: You put this around the neck, and this padlock, which is a lock called the screw lock, and the screw lock goes in this little hole, and that’s how they held the slave secure.”

Despite his focus on his hometown and community, Berry became known across the country, with the New York Times describing him in an article as a “one-man racial reconciliation committee” due to his work sharing both Black history and Orthodox Christian spirituality. In 2022, Father Moses Berry was honored by the Eastern Orthodox Church with the highest honor bestowed upon a priest, the Jeweled Cross. In 2023, Missouri State University inducted Berry into the Missouri Public Affairs Hall of Fame, briefly mentioning his heritage and his work as a lecturer both locally and nationally. 

Berry went on a spiritual pilgrimage for much of his life that eventually led him to return back to the land which birthed him. “It’s home to me,” Berry said. “It’s, as a matter of fact, when I came back here, it was almost like coming to a mythical place. Because all my most fond memories occurred in this town. So, sort of like a little Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn town, and I grew up here. So coming back was more than just returning home. And you know the old expression, people say you can never come home. I found that not to be the case here.”

According to the Springfield News-Leader, Berry returned to Ash Grove after he inherited the family farm built by his great-grandfather in 1875. Berry’s antecedents created the space following their freedom from enslavement after the Civil War. Part of the property includes a cemetery, which was renamed Resurrection Cemetery. Originally dedicated in 1875 to “Slaves, Indians, and Paupers,” all groups who were traditionally denied spaces to be buried in Missouri’s segregated cemetery system. Resurrection Cemetery is currently listed on both the national and Greene County registers of historic places.

Father Ephraim Tauck told KSMU that Berry’s funeral is expected to be held at the Theotokos Unexpected Joy Orthodox Church, the church founded by Father Moses Berry, located in Ash Grove on the evening of Jan. 15. A specific time has not yet been announced for the funeral.

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