Home / Full timeline / Oscar J. Dunn becomes the Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana. It is the highest elective office held by a Black person up to that time.
Oscar J. Dunn becomes the Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana. It is the highest elective office held by a Black person up to that time.
1868 (Jun 13)
Oscar J. Dunn, a freedman, became Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana, the highest elective office held by a Black American up to that time. Dunn was an apprentice to a plasterer and house painter until age fifteen, when he escaped. Born in New Orleans in 1826, Dunn took a job with the Freedman's Bureau there at the close of the Civil War. (He had served as a captain in the union army during the war). As a Bureau agent, Dunn checked the employment practices of planters who hired Black laborers. He found that the freedmen were often cheated of their minimum $15-a-month earnings and thus reported these and other abuses of the Freedman's Bureau wage-contract system. Dunn was one of the forty-nine Blacks who attended the Louisiana Constitutional Convention in 1867-68. As lieutenant governor, Dunn presided over the state senate and signed some of the laws emanating from the new state constitution. In 1871, he was named chairman of the Republican State Convention. Since Dunn was a skillful politician, some considered nominating him for governor or U.S. Senator before his untimely death in 1871.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.