Henry Wilkins Chandler

Henry Wilkins Chandler (September 22, 1852 - 1938) was an American lawyer, newspaperman, politician, and federal official. Born a freeman, he was the first African American graduate from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. He served two terms in the Florida State Senate.

Early life and education

Henry W. Chandler was born September 22, 1852 in Bath, Maine to Julia Ann (Fry) and Henry Augustus Chandler, a Baptist church deacon and barber.[1][2] Chandler received his primary education at Bath's public schools and enrolled in Bates College in 1870. He went on to become an editor of the college's student-run newspaper, The Bates Student, and served on the executive committee of the Eurosophian Literary Society.

Upon graduating from Bates in 1874, he went on to attend Howard University, and graduated with a law degree three years later. While attending Howard University from 1874 to 1876, he also taught classes at Howard.[3]

Career

After completion of his law degree he moved to Florida, passed the Florida Bar, and began to practice law in Ocala, Florida in 1878. He also became active in his church affairs and was selected to be a deacon in the Mount Moriah Baptist Church in Ocala.[1] He began to edit local newspapers such as The Ocala Republican and The Plain Dealer.[1]

After his brief stint in newspaper publishing he was elected to the Florida Senate in 1880 from the nineteenth district comprising Marion County, Florida. He held the office for two terms. He also held a number of political positions in Ocala, including clerk and alderman.[1] He was also the city clerk for Jacksonville. Chandler was chosen to be a state delegate to the Republican National Convention several times.[4]

As a state senator he was photographed with some of his colleagues.[5][6] He was Inspector of Customs in Tampa from 1908 until 1913.[7] When U.S. President Woodrow Wilson dismissed all African American federal officials in Florida in 1913 he lost his job as inspector of customs in the town of Port Tampa.[8] He is buried in Tiger Flowers Cemetery.[8]

Personal life

On October 2, 1884 he married Annie M. Onley, a teacher in Jacksonville[1] who was a native of New York. They had at least six children,[9] including their eldest son, Edward Marion Augustus Chandler, (1887–1973) who was the second African American in the United States to receive a Ph.D. in Chemistry and a founding faculty member at Roosevelt University in Chicago.[10]

After Annie Chandler's death, Henry Chandler remarried in 1914 to Maggie J. Adams, an active church member and dressmaker from Tampa.[11] Henry Chandler was an active Freemason.[12]

References

  1. Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. No. 247. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p257-259
  2. David C. Young, "Early Families of Sabattus, Androscoggin Co, Maine: formerly part of Greene, Lewiston, Lisbon, Bowdoin & West Bowdoinham" (1998) http://files.usgwarchives.net/me/androscoggin/sabattus/families/cfiles.txt
  3. [African Americans in South Florida: A Home and a Haven for Reconstruction-era Leaders by Larry E. Rivers and Canter Brown, Jr.
  4. "Henry Chandler - 150 Years - Bates College". www.bates.edu. Retrieved 2016-03-19.
  5. https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/26206
  6. https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/859
  7. Woodson, Carter Godwin; Logan, Rayford Whittingham (1920). The Journal of Negro History. Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. p. 70. h.w. chandler florida senate marion.
  8. https://www.newschief.com/news/20180223/african-americans-in-polk-county-david-john-simpson-was-doctor-to-all
  9. 1900 Census
  10. https://www.sciencehistory.org/historical-profile/edward-chandler (accessed on May, 1, 2020)
  11. "Quiet Negro Wedding: Henry Chandler, Formerly of Custom House, Weds Maggie Adams," The Tampa Tribune (Tampa, Florida), 12 Mar 1914, Thu, Page 4
  12. Great Black Men of Masonry (2002) p. 86
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