George W. Albright Explained

Birth Date:15 August 1846
Birth Place:near Holly Springs, Mississippi
State Senate:Mississippi State
District:25th
Term Start:January 20, 1874
Term End:January 1878
Predecessor:Henry M. Paine
Successor:A. M. West
Party:Republican

George Washington Albright (August 15, 1846 - 1944)[1] was an American farmer, educator, and politician who was born enslaved in the U.S. state of Mississippi. A Republican, Albright represented the 25th District[2] (consisting of Marshall County) in the Mississippi State Senate from 1874 to 1879 during the end of the Reconstruction Era. In 1873, Albright won his Senate seat by defeating the Democrat E. H. Crump, a leader in the Ku Klux Klan.[3] Albright served in the 1874-1875 session and the 1876-1877 session.[4]

After he was emancipated from slavery, Albright worked as a field hand. His father, who was sold to an owner in Texas shortly before the American Civil War, joined the Union Army and was killed at the Battle of Vicksburg in Mississippi. During the War, Albright was a member of the Union League, which promoted loyalty to the Republican Party and spread news of the Emancipation Proclamation among still enslaved people. After the war, he attended a school run by Sheriff Nelson Gill.

Albright married a white teacher and became a teacher himself. When he narrowly escaped with his life in a confrontation with Klansmen, Albright moved to Chicago, Kansas, and later Colorado. In 1937, in an interview with the communist Daily Worker newspaper, he hailed Communist Party USA for nominating a Black man, James W. Ford, for the vice-presidency in the 1936 presidential election.[5] [6]

In 2021, DeeDee Baldwin, a research librarian heading the Against All Odds archival history effort on African American legislators in Mississippi during and after the Reconstruction era and one of Albright's descendants were part of a recorded talk and slide presentation.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: George Washington Albright – Against All Odds . 2024-06-24 . en-US.
  2. Book: Senate, Mississippi Legislature . Journal . 1874 . 4 . en.
  3. Book: Society, Mississippi Historical. Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society. March 5, 2016. 1912. 193–.
  4. Book: Lowry, Robert . A History of Mississippi: From the Discovery of the Great River by Hernando DeSoto, Including the Earliest Settlement Made by the French Under Iberville, to the Death of Jefferson Davis . McCardle . William H. . 1891 . AMS Press . 978-0-404-04610-1 . 537 . en.
  5. Book: Boritt. Gabor S.. Hancock. Scott. Slavery, Resistance, Freedom. March 5, 2016. May 30, 2007. Oxford University Press. 9780190282875. 117–.
  6. Book: Foner, Eric. Freedom's Lawmakers: A Directory of Black Officeholders During Reconstruction. March 5, 2016. 1996. Louisiana State University Press. 9780807120828. 2–3.
  7. Against All Odds: Telling the Stories of the First Black Legislators in Mississippi. University Libraries Publications and Scholarship. May 21, 2021. Baldwin. Deedee. Burch. Karen. Ford. Bianca.