Black History Month is a time to reflect not only on historic milestones, but on the quiet strength that has carried families forward through generations of change. It is a time to honor leadership, enterprise, and cultural achievement. It is also a time to recognize something deeply personal: the determination within Black communities to protect loved ones even when access to financial systems and opportunity was limited.
Long before the modern insurance industry became widely accessible, systems of shared responsibility and mutual support were already taking shape within Black communities. These systems were practical responses to real needs. When illness, death or hardship occurred, families and neighbors stepped in to help one another shoulder the burden.
The Foundations: Mutual Aid and Shared Responsibility
In 1787, Ministers Richard Allen and Absalom Jones founded the Free African Society in Philadelphia.1 At a time when free Black Americans faced discrimination in churches, civic life and financial institutions, the Society created an organized structure through which members could contribute funds to assist the sick and ensure dignified burials.
The Free African Society became a model for other organizations, including the African Union Society and the New York African Society for Mutual Relief. 2 3 These mutual aid societies collected dues and distributed assistance during times of loss. Though they were not insurance companies in the modern sense, they operated on the same foundational principle of shared risk and shared responsibility.4
Following the Civil War, newly emancipated Black Americans worked to build economic stability for their families and communities. Protection against illness and death remained an urgent need. During Reconstruction and into the late 19th century, fraternal organizations such as the Mosaic Templars of America expanded structured mutual aid by offering burial and sickness benefits to members.5
These organizations were sophisticated operations. They collected dues, issued benefit certificates and developed leadership networks that strengthened financial literacy within their communities. In many ways, they served as bridges between informal mutual aid and formal insurance systems.
As the insurance industry grew in the late 1800s, many Black families still remained on the margins of that growth. Opportunities for coverage were often restricted, leaving communities to rely on their own institutions for protection. Out of that reality, innovation and enterprise took root again.
Faced with limited access, Black entrepreneurs and community leaders established their own insurance companies. One of the most influential examples was North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, founded in 1898 by John C. Merrick and six fellow Black leaders.6 Created specifically to serve the needs of Black policyholders, the company provided life insurance coverage that ensured families could meet burial expenses and maintain financial stability during periods of loss.
Black-owned insurers did more than issue policies. They created employment opportunities, cultivated trust and reinvested in their communities. They demonstrated that financial institutions could be both commercially viable and deeply community-centered. At a time when mainstream access was restricted, these companies expanded protection and reinforced economic confidence.
The legacy of mutual aid societies and Black-owned insurance companies carries forward into the present. Access to life insurance remains uneven in many communities today, particularly among families who are underinsured or uninsured. The need for trusted guidance and practical, affordable protection continues.
For more than a century, Kemper Life has focused on serving those markets, meeting families where they are and helping them secure meaningful coverage. Through our home service model, our agents build personal relationships in neighborhoods across the country. They sit at kitchen tables, listen to family goals and explain coverage options clearly and respectfully. Our commitment reflects a belief that protection should be accessible and that trust is built through personal connection.
We are proud to carry forward that commitment by helping families protect what matters most. Learn more about Kemper Life.
Sources:
[1] National Humanities Center – Early African American Mutual Benefit Societies: https://www.nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/maai/community/text5/text5read.htm
[2] VCU Social Welfare History Project – African Union Society: https://socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/religious/african-union-society/
[3] National Humanities Center – Early African American Mutual Benefit Societies: https://www.nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/maai/community/text5/text5read.htm
[4] Cambridge Guide to African American History – Mutual Aid Societies: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cambridge-guide-to-african-american-history/societies-mutual-aid/9852F251415D02AC9CACEE6E07FC9F38
[5] Encyclopedia of Arkansas.net – Mutual Aid Societies: https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/mosaic-templars-of-america-1186/
[6] North Carolina History Project – John Merrick (1859–1919): https://northcarolinahistory.org/encyclopedia/john-merrick-1859-1919/
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