Amiger, was an American college president, academic administrator, Baptist minister, missionary, and educator.
[1][2] He was the president of State University at Louisville (now Simmons College of Kentucky) in Louisville, Kentucky;[3] and president of American Baptist Theological Seminary (now American Baptist College) in Nashville, Tennessee.
[1] Amiger worked for as a pastor at Third Baptist Church in Springfield, Massachusetts from July 1903 until 1908;[1][7] followed by two months of work in 1908 as the main pastor at Myrtle Baptist Church in West Newton, Massachusetts, succeeding L.C.
[9][10] From 1918 to 1919 during World War I, Amiger served as a first lieutenant chaplain in the U.S. Army, assigned to Camp Hill in south Newport News, Virginia.
[1] His profile is included in the books, An Era of Progress and Promise, 1863–1910 (1910), and Who's Who Among the Colored Baptists of the United States (1913).