Matthew M. Lewey Explained

Mathew McFarlan Lewey
M.M. Lewey
Birth Date:December 1848
Birth Place:Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
Death Date:August 12, 1935
Education:Lincoln University,
Howard University School of Law
Occupation:Newspaper editor, newspaper publisher, military personnel, postmaster, lawyer, politician, justice of the peace
Allegiance:United States of America
Branch:Union Army
Unit:55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment
Battles:American Civil War
Office:Member of the
Florida House of Representatives
from Alachua County, Florida
Death Place:Jacksonville, Florida, U.S.
Term End:1883
Term Start:1883
Resting Place:Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Gainesville, Alachua County, Florida, U.S.

Mathew McFarlan Lewey (December 1848  - August 12, 1935), was an American newspaper editor and publisher, postmaster, lawyer, politician, and justice of the peace in Florida.[1] He also served as an officer in the Union Army, and as a militia officer.[2] Lewey, who was from Baltimore, Maryland, was the first licensed Black male lawyer in Florida.[3] [4] [5] [6] He was a member of the National Negro Business League. He also used the name M.M. Lewey.[7]

Early life and education

Lewey was born in Baltimore, Maryland on December 1848. His parents were Eliza (née McFarlin) and John W. Lewey. He had limited education up until age 15, and at age 16 he was sent to New York to live with his aunt Emeline Carter and his grandfather Rev. William McFarlin. After his move he attended the African Free School No. 2 (or Mulberry Street School) on Mulberry Street in New York City.

He left school early to join the Union Army. During the American Civil War he served in the 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment.[8]

Lewey studied at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania; and at Howard University's Law School.

Career

In 1876, he moved to Newnansville, Florida (near Gainesville).[9] Lewey served as the postmaster and mayor (1875–1877) of Newnansville, Florida.[10] During that same time from 1875 to 1876, Lewey was justice of the peace for Alachua County. He represented Alachua County in the Florida House of Representatives in 1883. He served as a Gainesville councilman from 1886 to 1890, and 1891.

In, Lewey and Josiah T. Walls published The Farmers' Journal. In 1887, Lewey established the Gainesville Sentinel (one of Florida's first Black newspapers) which became the Florida Sentinel newspaper in Pensacola when he relocated there in 1894.[11] He served as its editor and publisher.[12]

In 1905, he started a Pensacola street car boycott, due to segregation. In 1919, Lewey was a founding member of the Associated Negro Press.

Death and legacy

He died at age 88 on August 12, 1935, in Jacksonville, Florida. He is buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Gainesville.

The New York Public Library has a photo of him.[13] A profile of him is included in the books The Afro-American Press and Its Editors (1891).

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: A forgotten obituary: The legacy of Sgt. Matthew M. Lewey . A forgotten obituary: The legacy of Sgt. Matthew M. Lewey - The Independent Florida Alligator.
  2. Web site: Captain Matthew M. Lewey's Company Muster Roll, Alachua County, April 1882 . Florida Memory . Institute of Museum and Library Services.
  3. Book: Brown, Canter . Florida's Black Public Officials, 1867-1924 . September 23, 1998 . University of Alabama Press . 9780817309152 . 104, 147, 149–150 . Google Books.
  4. Web site: Thomas . Voleer . Gainesville Sun's coverage of race relations from reconstruction to Jim Crow era scrutinized . 2023-09-14 . Gainesville Sun . en-US.
  5. News: Dogan . Reginald T . 29 June 2006 . Historic home of Florida's first black lawyer/editor goes up in smoke . C.1 . Pensacola News Journal . .
  6. Book: Neyland, Leedell W. . Twelve Black Floridians . 1970 . Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University Foundation . 669377162.
  7. Book: Penn, Irvine Garland . The Afro-American Press and Its Editors . 1891 . Willey & Company . 978-0-598-58268-3 . 170–173 . en . Hon. M.M. Lewey, Editor Florida Sentinel . https://books.google.com/books?id=Y80OAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA170.
  8. Book: Payne, Charles M. . Time Longer Than Rope: A Century of African American Activism, 1850-1950 . Green . Adam . August 2003 . NYU Press . 978-0-8147-6703-0 . 204 . en.
  9. Web site: Ahern . Shannon . July 28, 2020 . M. M. Lewey timeline . 2023-11-27 . The Independent Florida Alligator . en-US.
  10. Book Notes . Florida Historical Quarterly . 1971 . 50 . 2 . 204–210 .
  11. Book: McCarthy, Kevin M. . African American Sites in Florida . 2019-07-24 . Rowman & Littlefield . 978-1-56164-951-8 . 4 . en.
  12. Web site: The Florida Sentinel Annual, 1904, Pensacola, Fla. | uwf.digital.flvc.org. uwf.digital.flvc.org.
  13. Web site: African American Newspaper Editors in Early 20th Century Florida – The US Caribbean & Ethnic Florida Digital Newspaper Project. 22 February 2018.