Charles Caldwell (politician)

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Charles Caldwell (1830 or 1831 – December 25, 1875) was a Reconstruction era political and state militia leader in Mississippi.[1] He held office as a state senator and county commissioner before being assassinated in 1875.[2]

A former slave, he was a delegate to Mississippi's 1868 Constitutional Convention.[3] He worked as a blacksmith in Clinton, Mississippi, a small town about 12 miles from Jackson in Hinds County, Mississippi.[4][3]

Political violence in Clinton included the Clinton Riot after a political rally of African Americans. Governor Adelbert Ames authorized a militia in response and put Caldwell in charge of it in Clinton but later backed down and disbanded it.

The U.S. Congress reported on election violence and Caldwell's assassination.[5] A plaque commemorates his life.[6]

References[]

  1. ^ "Charles Caldwell – Against All Odds".
  2. ^ "Caldwell, Charles". Mississippi Encyclopedia.
  3. ^ a b Wisniewska, Zuzanna (December 2, 2018). "Charles Caldwell (ca. 1831-1875) •".
  4. ^ Aptheker, Herbert (1947). "Mississippi Reconstruction and the Negro Leader Charles Caldwell". Science & Society. 11 (4): 340–371. JSTOR 40399859 – via JSTOR.
  5. ^ Mississippi in 1875: Report of the Select Committee to Inquire into the Mississippi Election of 1875, United States Congress, Washington D.C., Government Printing Office (1876)
  6. ^ "Charles Caldwell (Ca. 1831-1875) •". December 2, 2018.

Further reading[]

  • Steven J. Niven, “Caldwell, Charles,” African American National Biography, edited by Henry Louis Gates Jr., Oxford African American Studies Center


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