by Susan Robinson |
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John
Mercer Langston was the first African American elected to public office. He was born on the plantation of Captain Ralph Quarles in
Louisa County, Virginia. Quarles was his father, and his mother, Lucy Langston, was a
former slave of African and Native American descent who had been emancipated
by Quarles. Langston had two
brothers, Gideon and Charles, and a sister, Maria.
In 1834 both his parents died of unrelated illnesses, and Langston
and his siblings became orphans. They
were rich orphans, however, because Quarles had left his entire estate to
them. A
family friend in Ohio (a free state) took in the children and raised them
until he moved his family to Missouri, a slavery state.
Langston remained in Ohio, and at the age of fourteen he enrolled
in Oberlin College. At Oberlin
he earned a Bachelor’s degree, and then a Master’s degree in theology.
During and after his college years, Langston became involved in
politics, organizing political groups for African
Americans to advance the causes of abolition of slavery and civil
rights for Black people. In
1848, Frederick Douglass invited him to speak
at the first National Black Convention.
Langston’s speech exhorted people to assist runaway slaves. Langston
applied to several law schools but was denied entry because of his race. One law school suggested he enroll, but sit at the back of
the classroom and keep quiet, and then if after a while none of the other
students objected to his presence, he could gradually become an active
participant. The president of
the law school recommended he pretend to be French or Spanish, anything
except African American. Langston,
quite insulted, declined, and instead found a position working for a judge,
Philemon Bliss, who trained him until he passed the bar exam in 1854.
Langston became a successful and prominent attorney.
One of his most famous cases was that of Edmonia Lewis, who was
accused of poisoning two of her White classmates at Oberlin.
Langston’s defense resulted in her acquittal, and she went on to
become an acclaimed African American sculptor. Langston
became an opponent of the American Colonization Society, which advocated
sending Black people back to Africa. As
his reputation grew in political circles, he came to be regarded as one of
the most African American leaders of his time. Langston
married Caroline Wall, another Oberlin alumnus.
They moved to Brownhelm, Ohio, where he served on the City Council
for about five years starting in 1855.
When he was elected to the position of Town Clerk, he became the
first African American to be elected to a public office.
He was active in the Republican Party and was instrumental in
steering the party toward its strong anti-slavery position. As
a respected Black leader, Langston was called upon to recruit African
American volunteers to fight in the Civil War.
He organized the first Black regiment in the history of the United
States, the Massachusetts 54th, and two other regiments made up
of African American soldiers. During
and after the war, he fought tirelessly for voting rights for Black
Americans. Langston held many offices, including
president of the National
Equal Rights League and member of the Board of Education in Oberlin.
In 1868 and 1869, he was Education Inspector for the Freedmen’s
Bureau, working to provide educational opportunities for newly freed slaves.
From 1869 until 1876, he was the dean of Howard University’s law
school, but the Board of Trustees became uncomfortable with his political
views. They forced him out of
the position, but the entire Law Department at Howard resigned in protest of
their action. After leaving
Howard, Langston was appointed to the diplomatic corps and served as U.S.
Consul General to Haiti for seven years.
Upon his return, he became president of Virginia Normal College
Institute. In 1889, Langston was elected to the United
States Congress, representing the State of Virginia.
There was a long legal dispute concerning rigging of the polls on
election day, an apparent attempt by Langston’s Democratic opponents to
prevent him from taking his seat in Congress.
After an eighteen month battle, Langston took his congressional
position. He spent the rest of his life in Washington,
D.C., as a political leader and activist, although he was not re-elected to
Congress. He retired in 1894
and wrote his autobiography, From the Virginia Plantation to the National
Capital. The town of
Langston, Oklahoma, and Langston University, in that town, were named after
him. He is recognized as a successful African American leader and
advocate, who fought for abolition of slavery, African American voting
rights, and education for Black people.
In his time, he was second only to Frederick Douglass in influence
and achievement in the political arena.
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