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John Mercer Langston becomes the first Black American to win an elective office in the U.S.
1855 (Jan 15)
John Mercer Langston was elected clerk of Brownhelm township in Lorain County, Ohio, making him the first Black American to win an elective political office in the United States. Langston was born to a white man and a Black enslaved woman on a Virginia plantation in 1829. After his father's death, Langston was sent to Ohio, where he was reared by one of his father's friends. By 1854, Langston was engaged in an active law practice in Chillicothe, Ohio, and in 1855, as the only Black American attorney in Brownhelm, he was elected clerk. Langston won a seat on the Brownhelm City Council the following year, a post he held until 1860. In 1865, he was named president of the national equal rights league and in 1867 he became a member of the board of education in Oberlin, Ohio. After his return to the south during reconstruction, Langston served as inspector general to the Freedman's bureau schools (1868-69); teacher, law school dean, and acting vice-president of Howard University (1869-76); minister to Haiti (1877-85); president of the Virginia normal and collegiate institute (1885-88); and congressman from Virginia (1889-91). Langston, who died in 1897, was one of the last Black Americans elected to the U.S. congress in the nineteenth century and was the great-uncle of Harlem renaissance poet Langston Hughes.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.