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John Roy Lynch (September 10, 1847 – November 2, 1939) was an American writer, attorney, military officer, author, and Republican politician who served as Speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives and represented Mississippi in the United States House of Representatives.
John R. Lynch was born into slavery in 1847 and was freed in 1863 after Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.He entered politics shortly after the end of the Civil War, was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives in 1869, and was made speaker of the house in 1872.
Edmunds's supporters, led by Henry C. Lodge, moved to nominate John R. Lynch instead, an African-American from Mississippi. The speech supporting Lynch was given by Theodore Roosevelt. Lynch won the vote 424 to 384, and Blaine's nomination seemed for the first time vulnerable. [1]
First African-American (and first woman), appointed director of the Peace Corps: Carolyn R. Payton; First African-American drafted to play professional basketball, first woman to dunk in a professional women's game: Cardte Hicks [263] First African-American woman in the U.S. Cabinet: Patricia Roberts Harris, Secretary of Housing and Urban ...
First African-American Speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives, and of any state legislature: John R. Lynch First African American elected to the Tennessee General Assembly: Sampson W. Keeble. 1876; First African American elected to the Illinois General Assembly: John W. E. Thomas. 1878
The Dunning School was criticized by John R. Lynch in his 1913 book The Facts of Reconstruction, in which he argued that African American politicians had made many gains since the end of the Civil War and that those gains were of their own accord. [13]
Remembering Reconstruction: Struggles over the Meaning of America's Most Turbulent Era, published in 2017 by Louisiana State University Press, edited by Carole Emberton and Bruce E. Baker, with an introduction by W. Fitzhugh Brundage, is a collection of ten essays by historians of the Reconstruction era who examine the different collective memories of different social groups from the time of ...
The racial expulsion, or ethnic cleansing, of Forsyth County was among the events explored in Banished: American Ethnic Cleansings, aired on PBS in 2015 in its Independent Lens series. [ 24 ] The 2016 non-fiction book by author Patrick Phillips , Blood at the Root: A Racial Cleansing In America , examines the 1912 events in Forsyth County along ...