African-American officeholders during and following the Reconstruction era

Scholars have identified more than 1,500 African American officeholders who served during the Reconstruction Era (1865–1877)[1] after passage of the Reconstruction Acts in 1867 and 1868 as well as in the years after Reconstruction before white supremacy, disenfranchisement, and the Democrat Party fully reasserted control in Southern states. Historian Canter Brown, Jr. noted that in some states, such as Florida, the highest number of African Americans were elected or appointed to offices after 1877 and the end of Reconstruction. The following is a partial list some of the most notable of the officeholders pre-1900.

First African American U.S. Senator Hiram Revels and U.S. Representatives (R-MS), Rep. Benjamin S. Turner (R-AL), Robert DeLarge (R-SC), Josiah Walls (R-FL), Jefferson Long (R-GA), Joseph Rainey and Robert B. Elliott (R-SC)


US House

Alabama

State Senate

  • A. H. Curtis - Perry
  • James K. Greene - Hale
  • Jeremiah Haralson - Dallas
  • John W. Jones - Lowndes
  • Lloyd Leftwich - Greene
  • Benjamin F. Royal representing Bullock County (1868-1876)

1868 Legislature

From 1868 to 1878 more than 100 African Americans served in the Alabama Legislature.[2]

House

  • Benjamin F. Alexander representing Greene County
  • James H. Alston representing Macon County
  • Matt Avery representing Perry County
  • Samuel Blandon - Lee
  • Nathan A. Brewington - Lowndes
  • Richard Burke - Sumter
  • John Carraway - Mobile
  • George Cox - Montgomery
  • Thomas Diggs - Barbour
  • Joseph Drawn - Dallas
  • Ovide Gregory - Mobile
  • James K. Greene - Hale
  • D. H. Hill - Bullock
  • George Houston - Sumter
  • Benjamin Inge - Sumter
  • Columbus Jones - Madison
  • Edward R. Rose - Marengo
  • Shandy W. Jones - Tuscaloosa
  • Horace King - Russell
  • Thomas Lee - Perry
  • Greene S. W. Lewis - Perry
  • Jefferson McCalley - Madison
  • A. G. Richardson - Wilcox
  • Lawrence S. Speed - Bullock
  • W. L. Taylor - Chambers
  • Holland Thompson - Montgomery
  • William V. Turner - Elmore
  • Spencer Weaver - Dallas
  • L. J. Williams - Montgomery
  • Henry Young - Lowndes

House

  • George W. Braxdell - Talladega
  • Thomas Clark - Barbour
  • Henry A. Cochran - Dallas
  • Henry H. Craig - Montgomery
  • Alexander H. Curtis - Perry
  • Thomas H. Diggs - Barbour
  • John Dozier - Perry
  • William D. Gaskin - Lowndes
  • Edward Gee - Dallas
  • James K. Greene - Hale
  • Jere Haralson - Dallas
  • Horace King - Russell
  • R. L. Johnson - Dallas
  • Henry St. Clair (politician) - Macon
  • Lawrence Speed - Bullock
  • Holland Thompson - Montgomery
  • Mansfield Tyler - Lowndes
  • Levie Wells - Marengo
  • L. J. Williams - Montgomery

House

  • William E. Carson - Lowndes
  • Thomas J. Clarke - Barbour
  • Henry A.Cochran - Dallas
  • Mentor Dotson - Sumter
  • John Dozier - Perry
  • Hales Ellsworth - Montgomery
  • Samuel Fantroy - Barbour
  • Joseph H. Goldsby - Dallas
  • James K. Greene - Hale
  • R. L. Johnson - Dallas
  • Reuben Jones - Madison
  • Greene S. W. Lewis - Perry
  • Perry Mathews - Bullock
  • January Maull - Lowndes
  • Willis Merriwether - Wilcox
  • G. R. Millen - Russell
  • George Patterson - Macon
  • Samuel J. Patterson - Autauga
  • Robert Reed - Sumter
  • Bristo W. Reese - Hale
  • Lawrence S. Speed - Bullock
  • Henry St. Clair - Macon
  • Lawson Steele - Montgomery
  • William Taylor - Sumter
  • B. R. Thomas - Marengo
  • Frank H. Threatt - Marengo
  • J. R. Treadwell - Russell
  • Thomas H. Walker - Dallas
  • A. E. Williams - Barbour
  • L. J. Williams - Montgomery

House

  • G. W. Allen - Bullock
  • Elijah Baldwin - Wilcox
  • Granville Bennett - Sumter
  • William H. Blevins - Dallas
  • James Bliss - Sumter
  • Matthew Boyd - Perry
  • Hershel V. Cashin - Montgomery
  • Elijah Cook - Montgomery
  • D. J. Daniels - Russell
  • Charles Fagan - Montgomery
  • Adam Gachet - Barbour
  • Prince Gardner - Russell
  • William Gaskin _ Lowndes
  • Charles E. Harris - Dallas
  • A. W. Johnson - Macon
  • Samuel Lee - Lowndes
  • Greene S. W. Lewis - Perry
  • Edwin C. Locke - Wilcox
  • Jacob Martin - Dallas
  • Perry Matthews - Bullock
  • Willis Merriwether - Wilcox
  • Edward Odum - Barbour
  • George Patterson - Macon
  • Bristo W. Reese - Hale
  • Robert Reid - Sumter
  • Charles Smith - Bullock
  • A. E. Williams - Barbour
  • J. R. Witherspoon - Perry
  • Manly Wynne - Hale

House

  • Elijah Baldwin - Wilcox
  • William H. Blevins - Dallas
  • Hugh A. Carson - Lowndes
  • Hershel V. Cashin - Montgomery
  • Charles O. Harris - Montgomery
  • Green T. Johnston - Dallas
  • Captain Gilmer - Montgomery
  • Greene S. W. Lewis - Perry
  • Nimrod Snoddy - Greene
  • William J. Stevens - Dallas

House

Other

Arkansas

Between 1868 and 1893, 85 men noted as either "Colored" or Mulatto served in the state legislature (House and Senate) of Arkansas. They served under the 1868 Arkansas Constitution that granted them the right to vote and hold office and then the 1874 Constitution, instituted after Democrats retook control of state government. After 1893, the next African-American to serve as a state legislator in Arkansas was in 1973.[6]

  • Joseph Carter Corbin, chief clerk of the Little Rock Post Office (1872), state superintendent of public schools (1873-1875)
  • William Henry Grey, Arkansas Constitutional Convention (1868)
  • James T. White, Arkansas Constitutional Convention (1868), commissioner of public works and internal improvements (1872)

Senate

House

Local office

Colorado

House

  • John T. Gunnell (1881)
  • Joseph H. Stuart (1895)[10]

local offices

Florida

Senate

House

  • Edward I Alexander representing Madison County 1877, 1879, 1885
  • Samuel Anderson representing Duval County in 1887
  • Josiah Haynes Armstrong representing Columbia County in 1871, 1872, and 1875
  • Richard Horatio Black (February 11, 1839 - May 13, 1911), soldier, teacher, Volusia County registrar, Alachua County justice of the peace, Florida House of Representatives representing Alachua County 1869 and 1870, custom house position in Philadelphia[11]
  • William Bradwell, delgate to the 1868 Florida Constitutional Convention, and member of the Florida House from Duval County 1868 to 1870
  • Richard Lewis Brown Sr. (1854 - August 24, 1948), served in the Florida House of Representatives for Duval County in 1881 and 1883[12]
  • Phillip Carroll (born March 1847), served innthe Florida House of Representatives in 1881 from Leon County[13]
  • Joseph Newman Clinton
  • Thomas Van Renssalaer Gibbs, Florida House of Representatives, son of Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs
  • George C. Coleman (January 1851 - 1926) represented Nassau County, Florida in the House in 1881
  • Oliver J. Coleman (1844 - May 29, 1926) represented Madison County, Florida in the House in 1871, 1872, and 1875. Also served in the Florida Senate in 1874, as a county commissioner, and Madison councilman[14]
  • Singleton Coleman (1825 - October 11, 1874) served in the House for Marion County in 1873 and 1874[14]
  • Zebulon Elijah
  • Frederick Hill, state representative
  • George A. Lewis
  • John R. Scott Jr.

Georgia

Senate

House

Illinois

House

Indiana

House

Kansas

House

Louisiana

In Louisiana 24 African Americans served in the Louisiana Senate and more than 100 served in the Louisiana House of Representatives. Three African Americans served as Louisiana's Lieutenant Governor.[15]

  • Oscar James Dunn, Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana 1868–1871, First African American elected to a state-level position in the United States.
  • P.B.S. Pinchback, Lieutenant Governor and Governor of Louisiana
  • Caeser C. Antoine, Lieutenant Governor

Senate

House

Local offices

  • Thomas Morris Chester, superintendent of school district (1875)
  • James Lewis (Louisiana politician), administrator of public improvements in New Orleans in 1872, appointed New Orleans naval officer in 1877
  • Pierre Magloire, Avoyelles Parish Sheriff, Louisiana (1872)
  • Alexander Noguez, Avoyelles Parish Sheriff, Louisiana (1868–1872)

Maryland

Local offices

  • William H. Day Baltimore Inspector of Schools, in 1878 he was elected to the school board of directors at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Massachusetts

House

Local offices

Michigan

House

local offices

  • Samuel C. Watson, State Board of Estimates, 1875; Detroit City Council, 1875, 1883-1886

Minnesota

House

Mississippi

US Senate

State Senate

  • Blanche Bruce, Bolivar County sheriff, tax collector, supervisor of education; sergeant-at-arms for the Mississippi state senate in 1870; state senator in 1874 (U.S. Senate in 1875-1881)
  • James Hill, Mississippi Secretary of State, Mississippi House of Representatives
  • Peter Barrow, State Senator from Mississippi
  • Jesse Freeman Boulden, Mississippi House of Representatives
  • Robert Gleed, State Senator from Mississippi

State House

Other

Nebraska

House

Local offices

North Carolina

Ohio

Senate

  • John P. Green, 1892

House

Local offices

  • Jeremiah A. Brown, Cleveland, bailiff of the county probate court, deputy sheriff and county prison turnkey, then clerk of the City Boards of Equalization and Revision.[22]
  • Robert James Harlan, mail agent

South Carolina

A composite image of 63 "Radical Republicans" in the South Carolina Legislature in 1868 including 50 "negroes or mullatoes"

State Senate

House of Representatives

  • William Adamson representing Kershaw County from 1868 until 1870
  • Frank Adamson representing Kershaw County from 1870 until 1874
  • Jacob C. Allman representing Marion County from 1872 until 1876
  • Robert B. Artson representing Charleston County from 1872 until 1874
  • R. B. Anderson Georgetown County from 1890 to 1898
  • William J. Andrews Sumter County from 1874 to 1876
  • Samuel J. Bampfield Beaufort
  • George W. Barber Fairfield County from 1868 until 1872
  • John B. Bascomb representing Beaufort County
  • J. A. Baxter Georgetown County from 1884 to 1890
  • W. W. Beckett representing Berkeley Countyfrom 1882 to 1884
  • W. A. Bishop representing Greenville Countyfrom 1868 until 1870
  • J. W. Bolts Georgetown County from 1898 to 1900 also served from 1900 to 1902
  • Benjamin A. Bosemon representing Charleston County from 1868 until 1873
  • John Boston representing Darlington County
  • Joseph D. Boston representing Newberry County from 1868 until 1876
  • James A. Bowley representing Georgetown County from 1869 until 1874
  • E. M. Brayton Aiken
  • Sampson S. Bridges Newberry
  • Peter Bright Charleston
  • William Brodie Charleston
  • Stephen Brown Charleston
  • Richard Bryan Charleston
  • Benjamin Byos representing Berkeley County/Orangeburg County from 1870 until 1872
  • H. Z. Burchmeyer Charleston
  • Barney Burton Chester
  • Everidge Cain Abbeville
  • Edward J. Cain Orangeburg
  • Lawrence Cain Edgefield
  • Richard H. Cain Orangeburg
  • Christian Wesley Caldwell representing Orangeburg from 1876 to 1878
  • John A. Chestnut Kershaw
  • Caesar P. Chisolm Colleton
  • Simon P. Coker Barnwell
  • Wilson Cooke Greenville
  • Samuel Coleman Chester in 1875 and 1876
  • Augustus Collins Clarendon
  • Andrew W. Curtis Richland
  • Abram Dannerly representing Orangeburg County
  • Nelson Davies York County from 1873 to 1876
  • James Davis Richland
  • Thomas A. Davis representing Charleston County from 1870 until 1876
  • Robert C. DeLarge Charleston
  • Eugene Herriot Dibble Kershaw
  • John Dix Orangeburg
  • Samuel B. Doiley Charleston
  • Paul B. Drayton representing Charleston County from 1880 to 1882
  • William A. Driffle Colleton
  • Samuel L. Duncan Orangeburg County
  • S. C. Eckhard representing Charleston County from 1878 to 1880
  • W. T. Elfe Charleston
  • Robert B. Elliott representing Barnwell/Edgefield/Aiken
  • William E. Elliott Charleston
  • Henry H. Ellison Abbeville
  • John Evans Williamsburg
  • Philllip E. Ezekiel Beaufort
  • Simeon Farr Union
  • Simeon Farrow Union
  • T. R. Fields Beaufort
  • Adam P. Ford Charleston
  • Ellis Forrest Orangeburg
  • William H. Frazier Colleton
  • B. G. Frederick Orangeburg
  • John M. Freeman, Jr. Charleston
  • Florian Henry Frost Williamsburg
  • William H. Gardner Sumter
  • Stephen Gary Kershaw
  • Hastings Gantt Beaufort
  • John Gardner Edgefield
  • Stephen Gary Kershaw
  • Ebenezer F. George Kershaw
  • John Gibson Fairfield
  • Fortune Giles representing Williamsburg County
  • John T. Gilmore Richland
  • William C. Glover Charleston
  • Mitchell Goggins Abbeville
  • Aesop Goodson Richland
  • David Graham Edgefield
  • John G. Grant Marlboro
  • William A. Grant Charleston
  • Charles S. Green Georgetown
  • John Green Edgefield
  • Samuel Greene representing Beaufort County from 1870 until 1875
  • Ishom Greenwood Newberry
  • Thomas Hamilton Beaufort
  • James J. Hardy representing Charleston County in 1870and 1871
  • Alfred Hart Darlington
  • R. M. Harriett Georgetown
  • David Harris Edgefield
  • Eben Hayes representing Marion County
  • Charles D. Hayne Barnwell
  • James N. Hayne Barnwell
  • William A. Hayne Marion
  • Plato P. Hedges Charleston
  • John T. Henderson Newberry
  • James A. Henderson Newberry
  • Gloster H. Holland Aiken County
  • Abraham P. Holmes Colleton
  • A. H. Howard Marion
  • Allison W. Hough Kershaw
  • Richard H. Humbert Darlington
  • Barney Humphries Chester
  • Allen Hudson Lancaster
  • Alfred T. B. Hunter, state representative from Laurens County (1874  1876)
  • Austin Jackson Barnwell
  • Henry Jacobs Fairfield
  • Burrell James Sumter
  • James L. Jamison Orangeburg
  • Paul W. Jefferson Aiken
  • William R. Jervay Charleston
  • Griffin C. Johnson Laurens
  • John W. Johnson Marion
  • D. J. J. Johnson Chesterfield
  • Henry Johnson Fairfield
  • William E. Johnston representing Sumter County in 1868 and 1769
  • Samuel Johnson Charleston
  • Marshall Jones Orangeburg
  • A. H. Jones Charleston
  • Paul E. Jones Orangeburg
  • William H. Jones Georgetown
  • Samuel I. Keith Darlington
  • Jordan Lang Darlington
  • John Lee Chester
  • Levi Lee Fairfield
  • George H. Lee Charleston
  • Samuel J. Lee representing Edgefield County/Aiken County from 1868 until 1874
  • Joseph W. Lloyd Charleston
  • John Lilley Chester
  • Aaron Logan Charleston
  • Hutson J. Lomax representing Abbeville County
  • William Lowman Richland
  • William Maree Colleton
  • Thomas Martin Abbeville
  • Julius Mayer Barnwell
  • James P. Mays Orangeburg
  • Harry McDaniels Laurens
  • Thomas D. McDowell Georgetown
  • William J. McKinlay representing Orangeburg/Charleston
  • John W. Meade York
  • George M. Mears Charleston
  • Edward C. Mickey Charleston
  • Benjamin Middleton Barnwell
  • Isaac Miller Fairfield
  • M. Miller Fairfield
  • Thomas E. Miller Beaufort from 1874 until 1880
  • James Mills Laurens
  • L. S. Mills Beaufort
  • Syphax Milton Clarendon
  • Charles S. Minort Richland
  • F. S. Mitchell Beaufort
  • Junius S. Mobley Union
  • Alfred M. Moore Fairfield
  • Shadrack Morgan Orangeburg
  • William C. Morrison Beaufort
  • William J. Moultrie Georgetown
  • William F. Myers Colleton
  • Jonas W. Nash representing Kershaw County
  • William Nelson Clarendon
  • Richard Neabitt Charleston
  • Frederick Nix Jr. Barnwell
  • Charles F. North Charleston
  • Samuel Nuckles Union
  • Joseph Alexander Owens Barnwell County
  • Robert John Palmer Richland
  • Joseph Parker Charleston
  • Jeffrey Pendergrass Williamsburg
  • Wade Perrin Laurens
  • James F. Peterson Williamsburg County from 1872 to 1878
  • Edward Petty Charleston
  • William G. Pinckney Charleston
  • Thomas Pressley Williamsburg
  • Isaac Prioleau Charleston
  • Henry W. Purvis Lexington
  • Warren W. Ramsey representing Sumter County from 1869 until 1876
  • Alonzo J. Ransier Charleston
  • Cain Ravenel Berkeley
  • George A. Reed Beaufort
  • A. C. Reynolds Beaufort
  • J. C. Rice Beaufort
  • Thomas Richardson Colleton
  • Mark P. Richardson Berkeley
  • Henry Riley Orangeburg
  • Prince R. Rivers Edgefield/Aiken
  • J. R. Rivers Beaufort
  • Joseph Robinson Beaufort
  • J. C. Rue Beaufort
  • Alfred Rush Darlington
  • Thaddeus K. Sasportas Orangeburg
  • Sancho Saunders Chester
  • William C. Scott Williamsburg
  • Robert F. Scott Williamsburg
  • W. H. Sheppard Beaufort
  • Henry L. Shrewsburg Chesterfield
  • Augustus Simkins Edgefield
  • Paris Simpkins Edgefield
  • Hercules Simmons Colleton
  • Aaron Simmons Orangeburg
  • Benjamin Simmons Beaufort
  • Limus Simons Edgefield
  • William Simons Richland
  • Charles Sims Chester
  • Andrew Singleton Berkeley
  • James Singleton Berkeley
  • Asbury L. Singleton Sumter
  • J. P. Singleton Chesterfield
  • Robert Smalls Beaufort
  • Sherman Smalls Colleton
  • Rev. W. Smalls Charleston
  • James E. Smiling Sumter
  • Abraham W. Smith Charleston
  • Jackson A. Smith Darlington
  • Powell Smythe Clarendon
  • Butler Spears Sumter
  • James A. Spencer Abbeville
  • Nathaniel T. Spencer Charleston
  • Charles H. Sperry Georgetown
  • Henry Steele York
  • Caesar Sullivan Laurens
  • Robert Tarlton Colleton
  • John W. Thomas Marlboro
  • Benjamin A. Thompson Marion
  • Samuel B. Thompson Richland
  • Joseph Thompson Richland
  • William M. Thomas Colleton
  • Julius C. Tingman Charleston
  • Robert Turner representing Charleston County from 1872 until 1873
  • Richard M. Valentine representing Abbeville County in1868
  • John Vanderpool Charleston
  • Thomas H. Wallace Berkeley
  • Dublin Walker Chester from 1874 until 1877
  • John Wallace Orangeburg
  • Jared D. Warley Clarendon
  • J. J. Washington Beaufort
  • Archie Weldon Edgefield
  • James Wells Richland
  • John W. Westberry Sumter
  • Ellison M. Weston Richland
  • William James Whipper Beaufort
  • John H. White
  • Hannibal A. Wideman Abbeville County
  • James Wigg Beaufort
  • Charles M. Wilder Richland
  • Bruce H. Williams Georgetown
  • James Clement Wilson Sumter
  • Zachariah W. Wines Darlington
  • John B. Wright Charleston York County
  • Smart Wright Charleston
  • Prince Young Chester
  • James M. Young Laurens

Local offices

Tennessee

Texas

Three African-Americans won election to the Texas Senate and 32 others served in the Texas House of Representatives during the Reconstruction era.[26]

Senate

House

Virginia

Washington

House

West Virginia

House

Wyoming

House

Washington, D.C.

  • Solomon G. Brown, House of Delegates for Washington D.C. (1871-1874), employee at the Smithsonian[35]
  • John Mercer Langston, appointed member of the Board of Health of the District of Columbia
  • John H. Smythe, 1872, clerk in the U.S. Census Bureau, clerk in the Treasury department, 1878 ambassador to Liberia
  • William E. Matthews, clerk in the United States Postal Service in Washington D.C. in 1870, the first black person to receive an appointment in that department[36]
  • Josiah T. Settle, reading clerk of the Washington, D.C. House of Delegates (1872), clerk in the Board of Public Works, as an accountant in the Board of Audits, and as a trustee of the county schools for the district

See also

References

  1. "Reconstruction | Definition, Summary, Timeline & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  2. "x-index :: Reconstruction :: Politics :: Lest We Forget". lestweforget.hamptonu.edu.
  3. https://archives.alabama.gov/afro/AfricanAmerican%20Legislators%20in%20Reconstruction%20Alabama1867.pdf
  4. "Black members of the Alabama Legislature who served during reconstruction - Alabama Historical Markers on Waymarking.com". www.waymarking.com.
  5. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p390-393
  6. "A family legacy: Local woman recounts grandfather's public service following Reconstruction". texarkanagazette.com.
  7. "Carl H. Moneyhon". peace.saumag.edu.
  8. Dawson, R. (December 31, 1881). "1881 House of Representatives composite photo of the Twenty-Second General Assembly of the State of Arkansas". Arkansas General Assembly composite images, 1866-2011.
  9. "Arkansas Times - February 5, 2015". Issuu.
  10. https://pagetwo.completecolorado.com/2020/06/15/armstrong-colorados-remarkable-early-black-legislators/
  11. Florida's Black Public Officals by Canter Brown Jr. page 75
  12. Florida's Black Public Officials page 77
  13. Florida's Black Public Officials page 78
  14. Florida's Black Public Officials 1867 - 1924 by Canter Brown Jr., University of Alabama Press, 1998
  15. Vincent, Charles (January 28, 2011). "Black Legislators in Louisiana during Reconstruction". SIU Press via Google Books.
  16. Obituary: Anthony Overton Sr." (Lawrence KS) Western Recorder, April 18, 1884, p.3
  17. Vincent, Charles (1976). "Louisiana's Black Legislators and Their Efforts to Pass a Blue Law During Reconstruction". Journal of Black Studies. 7 (1): 47–56 via JSTOR.
  18. Fletcher, ~ Adam F. C. (March 18, 2019). "A History of North Omaha's African American Legislators".
  19. Foner, Eric (August 1, 1996). Freedom's Lawmakers: A Directory of Black Officeholders During Reconstruction. LSU Press. ISBN 9780807120828.
  20. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p422-425
  21. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p133-143
  22. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p113-117
  23. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p327  335
  24. Eichelberger, Julia; Fick, Sarah. "14 Green Way - Built for an African American during Reconstruction, later served as a women's residence hall". Discovering Our Past: College of Charleston Histories. Retrieved March 6, 2020.
  25. "African American Legislators". tennsos.org.
  26. "Early African-American Senators | TSLAC". www.tsl.texas.gov.
  27. "Legislative Reference Library | Legislators and Leaders | Member profile". lrl.texas.gov.
  28. "Texas Legislators: Past & Present - Mobile". lrl.texas.gov.
  29. "Texas Legislators: Past & Present - Mobile". lrl.texas.gov.
  30. "TSHA | Washington, James H." www.tshaonline.org.
  31. "TSHA | Wilder, Allen W." www.tshaonline.org.
  32. "TSHA | Williams, Benjamin Franklin". www.tshaonline.org.
  33. "TSHA | Williams, Richard". www.tshaonline.org.
  34. "TSHA | Wyatt, George W." www.tshaonline.org.
  35. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p291-295
  36. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p246-251

Further reading

  • A Brief Biography of John Willis Menard from Southern University's John B. Cade Library
  • Bailey, Richard. Black Officeholders During the Reconstruction of Alabama, 1867-1878 (Pyramid Publishing) Available from author.
  • Bailey, Richard. Neither Carpetbaggers Nor Scalawags: Black Officeholders During the Reconstruction of Alabama, 1867-1878. Montgomery: Richard Bailey Publishers, 1995.
  • Canter Brown, Jr. Florida's Black Public Officials, 1867-1924. Tuscaloosa and London: The University of Alabama Press, 1998.
  • Eric Foner ed., Freedom's Lawmakers: A Directory of Black Officeholders During Reconstruction Revised Edition. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1996). ISBN 0-8071-2082-0. Between 1865 and 1877, about two thousand blacks held elective and appointive offices in the South. A few are relatively well-known, but most have been obscure and omitted from official state histories. Foner profiles more than 1,500 black legislators, state officials, sheriffs, justices of the peace, and constables in this volume.
  • John Hope Franklin "John Roy Lynch: Republican Stalwart from Mississippi" in Howard Rabinowitz (ed.), Southern Black Leaders of the Reconstruction Era, (Urbana: 1982) and reprinted in John Hope Franklin, Race and History: Selected Essays, 1938-1988, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989
  • Mifflin Wistar Gibbs Shadow and Light: An Autobiography Autobiography with Reminiscences of the Last and Present Century, Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1995.
  • Rabinowitz, Howard N. Southern Black Leaders of the Reconstruction Era (University of Illinois Press: 1982) Section on "Congressmen" includes profiles of "John R. Lynch: Republican Stalwart from Mississippi" by John Hope Franklin, "James T. Rapier of Alabama and the Noble Cause of Reconstruction" by Loren Schweninger, and "James O'Hara of North Carolina: Black Leadership and Local Government" by Eric Anderson.
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