Alfred Niger was a free Black activist who lived and worked in Providence, Rhode Island. Originally from Connecticut, Niger moved to Providence, Rhode Island, where he worked as a barber until his death in 1862.
Niger’s time in Providence, RI, was busy being a barber and active in the Black national convention movement. At the Black national convention in Philadelphia, Niger was elected to draft and deliver an address to the American Moral Reform Society, which called for “the elimination of ‘national distinctions, complexional variations, geographical lines, and sectional bounds’ in the reform society’s conduct.”