[This week marks the 150th anniversary of the horrific Colfax Massacre, one of many such Reconstruction sesquicentennials over the next decade. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy five Reconstruction histories we need to better remember, leading up to a special weekend post on a vital new scholarly book.]
I’m quite sure
that every one of the more
than 1500 African Americans who held elected office during Reconstruction
has an amazing story we should better remember. (And that each of them would
fully counteract the awful stereotyping created by “historical” texts like Birth of a Nation.) Here are three
distinct but equally important and inspiring such individuals and stories:
1)
Benjamin Turner: Born
into slavery in 1825 North Carolina, sold down river to Alabama with his mother
when he was only five, and freed by the Emancipation Proclamation, Turner
became a self-made businessman and farmer in Selma while the war was still
raging. By 1865, he had enough local clout to found one of the areas first
freedmen’s schools; two years later he attended the state Republican
Convention, launching his political career with an appointment as the county’s
tax collector. In 1870 he ran successfully for the U.S. House of
Representatives; although he only served one term, it was a productive two years,
including authoring private pension bills for Civil War veterans and opposing a
cotton tax that he saw as disproportionately affecting African Americans. After
his 1872 defeat he mostly returned to farming, although he did attend the 1880
Republican National Convention in Chicago—one more reflection of his
political and communal prominence.
2)
Hiram
Revels: Born in 1827 to free African Americans in Fayetteville, North
Carolina, educated for the ministry in Northern seminaries, an itinerant
minister for the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) church throughout the 1850s
and the chaplain for one of the first African American regiments in the Civil
War, Revels’ story differs from Turner’s in just about every way. Yet he too
opened one of the earliest freedmen’s schools (this one in St. Louis, where he
had been a pastor before the war) and he too became one of the first African
Americans in Congress when he was appointed to the Senate by the Mississippi
state legislature in January 1870. Like Turner, Revels served only one term (or
in his case, only part of one), as he declined a number of appointments after
his Senate term ended in March 1871; yet in that brief time, Revels managed
both to fight for the education and rights of freed people and to advocate for
universal amnesty for former Confederate soldiers. And in his post-Senate life
he continued along both paths, serving as president of Alcorn A&M College
(now Alcorn State University) and writing a famous 1875 letter to
President Grant denouncing “carpetbaggers”—a duality that illustrates the breadth
of perspectives found among these Reconstruction legislators.
3)
P.B.S.
Pinchback: Subject of some of the most interesting sections in Allyson
Hobbs’ wonderful A Chosen Exile, Pinchback was the mixed-race
son of a freed slave and her former master (some of his siblings were born
while she was still a slave, but Pinchback was born in 1837, a year after she
was freed). Like Revels, he moved north to attend school and stayed there until
the outbreak of the war; during the war he moved to New Orleans and worked to
raise companies of African American soldiers for the Union army, becoming a
captain in one such company. After the war he became active in the Georgia
Republican Party, was elected to the State Senate in 1868, and succeeded Oscar Dunn
(the first elected African American Lieutenant Governor of any state) as the
state’s Lieutenant Governor upon Dunn’s death in 1871. A year later, Governor
Henry Clay Warmouth was tried for impeachment; state law required Warmouth to
step down while on trial, and for the final six weeks of his term Pinchback
served as Georgia’s governor, becoming the first African American governor in
the process. The moment reveals the chaotic histories unfolding in every
Southern state during Reconstruction—but Pinchback’s readiness and ability to
step into the governor’s role are one more reminder of how many impressive and
inspiring African American leaders made their mark throughout the period.
Next
Reconstruction remembrance tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Reconstruction histories you’d highlight?
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