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Black Legislators during Reconstruction | New Georgia Encyclopedia http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/...

Black Legislators during Reconstruction


Original entry by Edmund L. Drago, College of Charleston, South Carolina, 09/05/2002
Last edited by NGE Sta on 04/13/2016

Black men participated in Georgia politics for the first time during Congressional Reconstruction (1867-76). Between 1867 and 1872 sixty-nine
African Americans served as delegates to the constitutional convention (1867-68) or as members of the state legislature. Jeerson Franklin
Long, a tailor from Bibb County, sat in the U.S. Congress from December 1870 to March 1871. The three most prominent black state legislators
were Henry McNeal Turner, Tunis Campbell, and Aaron A. Bradley.

Turner came to Georgia from Washington, D.C., in 1865 to win black congregations to the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME). He was
the most successful black politician in organizing the black Republican vote and attracted other ministers into politics. He was a delegate to the
Georgia constitutional convention of 1867 and was elected to two terms in the Georgia legislature, beginning in 1868.

Campbell, a native of New Jersey, was a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. In 1864 he was appointed an agent of the
Freedmen's Bureau on the Georgia Sea Islands. He later moved to the mainland. In 1867 he was elected to the state constitutional convention.
The next year he became a state senator from the Second Congressional District. He built an impressive political machine in and around Darien
in McIntosh County.

Born in South Carolina, Bradley was a shoemaker in Augusta. Sometime around 1834 he ran away to the North, where he became a lawyer. In
1865 he returned to Georgia. He was the most outspoken member of the black delegation to the constitutional convention. In 1868 he was
elected state senator from the First District. Despite a checkered past, he rallied plantation blacks around Savannah with his insistence that the
former slaves be given land.

The church, with the enthusiastic support of black women, who were still disenfranchised, was the center of African American political activity.
Twenty-four legislators were ministers. However, religion, with its emphasis on the other world, predisposed some black politicians to become
too conciliatory. Most black delegates to the constitutional convention voted against including in the constitution the right of blacks to hold
oce. Turner later bitterly regretted that vote.

In September 1868 the legislature, dominated by Republicans, expelled its African American members. Energized, the black legislators, led by
Turner, successfully lobbied the federal government to reseat them. They continued to concentrate on political and civil rights. For many of
them, education had been their highest priority since 1865. With their solid support, Georgia adopted public education.

Conservatives used terror, intimidation, and the Ku Klux Klan to "redeem" the state. One quarter of the black legislators were killed, threatened,
beaten, or jailed. In the December 1870 elections the Democrats won an overwhelming victory. In 1906 W. H. Rogers from McIntosh County
was the last black legislator to be elected before blacks were legally disenfranchised in 1908.

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Black Legislators during Reconstruction | New Georgia Encyclopedia http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/...

Further Reading

Edmund L. Drago, Black Politicians and Reconstruction in Georgia: A Splendid Failure (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1992).

Russell Duncan, Freedom's Shore: Tunis Campbell and the Georgia Freedmen (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1986).

John M. Matthews, "Negro Republicans in the Reconstruction of Georgia," Georgia Historical Quarterly 60 (spring 1976).

Cite This Article

Drago, Edmund L. "Black Legislators during Reconstruction." New Georgia Encyclopedia. 13 April 2016. Web. 20 September 2017.

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