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Octavius Valentine Catto (February 22, 1839 – October 10, 1871) was an American educator, intellectual, and civil rights activist. He became principal of male students at the Institute for Colored Youth , where he had also been educated.
Octavius Catto (1839–1871) was born in South Carolina and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. [2] He protested to desegregate Philadelphia's trolley system, recruited African Americans to join the Union Army during the American Civil War, and campaigned for Pennsylvania to ratify the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which banned voting discrimination based on race. [3]
Octavius Catto, George B. Vashon, and Jacob C. White Jr. were elected as secretaries over the longer course of the League's lifespan. For this first meeting, Octavius Catto, Redman Fausett, and Alex T. Harris served as secretaries. [1]
After the Civil War, African Americans in Philadelphia, including Octavius V. Catto (1839–1871), organized to end segregation of the city's schools and streetcars and regain the right to vote. Their efforts paid off; in 1867, streetcar segregation was ended throughout the state, and legal segregation of schools ended in 1881 (although de ...
The story of John Gloucester was extracted from Octavius Catto's book A Semi-Centenary Discourse. [2] Gloucester was born with the first name Jack in 1776 as a slave in Tennessee. At an early age, he converted other slaves to Christianity. He was taught theology by the Reverend Gideon Blackburn, who "purchased" Jack and freed him in 1806. At 30 ...
LeCount, along with her fiancé Octavius Catto and abolitionist William Still, also made petitions and lobbying efforts towards desegregation. [1] The historian Daniel R. Biddle noted that "Caroline Le Count did almost the same thing as Rosa Parks did, but her streetcar in 1867 was powered by a horse." [13]
William T. Catto was a founding member of the Banneker Institute [5] [6] and wrote A Semi-Centenary Discourse: A History of the First African Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia. [7] His son Octavius Valentine Catto graduated from the Institute for Colored Youth and returned to it as a teacher in 1859. He served as member and recording ...
The Philadelphia Pythians (also Pythian Base Ball Club, Pythian Baseball Club, or the "Pyths") [1] was one of the earliest Negro league baseball clubs, founded in 1865. [2] [3] African-American leaders Jacob C. White Jr. and Octavius V. Catto established the team.