David Jenkins (1811 – September 4, 1876)[1][2] was an abolitionist, civil rights campaigner, newspaper founder, and politician in Columbus, Ohio and Mississippi.[3] He served as a state legislator in the Mississippi House of Representatives.[1] He was a Republican.[4] He represented Madison County, Mississippi.[5]
He was an agent on the Underground Railroad. At age 26 he moved to Columbus, Ohio. An abolitionist, he co-founded a short-lived abolitionist paper in Columbus. He then became a school teacher. During the Civil War he served in the 127th Ohio Infantry. After the war he worked for the Freedmens Bureau in Mississippi.[6]
In 1876 he voted against impeachment of T. W. Cardozo.[7]
He and Alfred Handy, another African American state legislator for Madison County, were warned about opposing "honest rule" in a notice run in the Canton Mail in 1876.[8]
He died in Canton, Mississippi.[1]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 "David Jenkins – Against All Odds".
- ↑ "American Citizen, September 9, 1876 – Against All Odds".
- ↑ Levstik, Frank R (October 1975). "DAVID JENKINS: EAGLE THAT IS FORGOTTON". Negro History Bulletin. 38 (7): 464. ProQuest 1296735759.
- ↑ "Cincinnati Enquirer, January 25, 1872 – Against All Odds". much-ado.net.
- ↑ "Clarion-Ledger, January 7, 1877 – Against All Odds". much-ado.net.
- ↑ Snodgrass, Mary Ellen (March 26, 2015). The Underground Railroad: An Encyclopedia of People, Places, and Operations. Routledge. ISBN 9781317454168 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Clarion Ledger, February 17, 1876 – Against All Odds".
- ↑ Elections, United States Congress Senate Committee on Privileges and (October 14, 1877). "Mississippi: Testimony as to Denial of Elective Franchise in Mississippi at the Elections of 1875 and 1876: Taken Under the Resolution of the Senate of December 5, 1876". U.S. Government Printing Office – via Google Books.