David Jenkins (abolitionist)

David Jenkins (1811 – September 4, 1876)[1][2] was an abolitionist, civil rights campaigner, newspaper founder, and politician in Columbus, Ohio and Mississippi.[3] He served as a state legislator in the Mississippi House of Representatives.[1] He was a Republican.[4] He represented Madison County, Mississippi.[5]

He was an agent on the Underground Railroad. At age 26 he moved to Columbus, Ohio. An abolitionist, he co-founded a short-lived abolitionist paper in Columbus. He then became a school teacher. During the Civil War he served in the 127th Ohio Infantry. After the war he worked for the Freedmens Bureau in Mississippi.[6]

In 1876 he voted against impeachment of T. W. Cardozo.[7]

He and Alfred Handy, another African American state legislator for Madison County, were warned about opposing "honest rule" in a notice run in the Canton Mail in 1876.[8]

He died in Canton, Mississippi.[1]

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.