Henry Turpin (1836 - 1905) was a house painter and state legislator in the U.S. state of Virginia. [1] His father was white. [2] He served from 1871 to 1873 in the Virginia House of Delegates. [3] He moved to the Bronx in New York City, married, worked as a porter, and had a daughter. [4]
He was involved in a contested election. [5] Edmund S. Pendleton was determined to have beaten him in the 1873 election. [6]
He and his seven brothers and sisters were freed by their father, most in 1855. Eric Foner documented him as a carpenter in Freedom's Lawmakers. [7] →