William E. Matthews | |
---|---|
Born | Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. | July , 1845
Died | May 2, 1894 48) Washington, D.C., U.S. | (aged
Alma mater | Howard University |
Occupation(s) | financier, lawyer |
Political party | Republican |
William E. Matthews (July 1845 - May 2, 1894) was a lawyer, financier, and civil rights activist in Baltimore, Maryland and Washington DC. He was active in promoting education for freedmen during and after the Civil War. He was very successful as a real estate and financial broker and was an important leader in African American society in the 1860s-1890s.
William E. Matthews was born in Baltimore, Maryland in July 1845. His father died when Matthews was twelve and he assumed responsibility for the family.
He attended Howard University, where he was a student of John M. Langston. He graduated from the law department in 1873. [1]
During the Civil War, Matthews was an agent of the Gilbraith Lyceum which was working for the education of black people in Maryland. Matthews' role including travelling throughout the state to help organize schools and discuss the transition of the people from slavery to citizenship. He also served as a pastor of a Baltimore church at this time.
After the war in 1867, he became an agent for a group organized by Bishop Daniel A. Payne to found schools and build churches among the freedmen throughout the southern United States. He continued with this work for three years. Part of his work involved his speaking at many wealthy churches in the northern states. His fundraising put him in contact with many leading intellectuals, including Henry Ward Beecher, Henry W. Longfellow, James Russell Lowell, Oliver Wendell Holmes, William Cullen Bryant, and John Greenleaf Whittier. [1]
Matthews spent much of his spare time in real estate, amassing considerable wealth and experience. In 1870, he was appointed clerk in the United States Postal Service in Washington D.C., the first African-American to receive an appointment in that department. In 1881, he resigned from the postal service and opened a real estate and broker's office in the Le Droit Building in Washington D.C. He was very successful in his business and his clients included Frederick Douglass, Daniel Payne, Charles Burleigh Purvis, and John M. Brown. [1]
Matthews was also worked for civil rights and participated in the Colored Conventions Movement. [2] He worked with John M. Langston and Frederick Douglass to organize Blacks to work for civil rights. [3] Matthews and Douglass were elected representatives of a New York convention in 1892 and met with President Benjamin Harrison to discuss lynchings and violence against blacks throughout the south. [4]
Matthews was a member of the 15th Street Presbyterian Church in Washington D.C. and was the chairman of its board of trustees. He was a noted orator, giving a eulogy to the Unitarian preacher and abolitionist John Fothergill Waterhouse Ware. He contributed to the A.M.E. Church Review . [1] He was also an active Republican. [5] Matthews died in the early morning of May 2, 1894. [6]
Frederick Douglass was an American social reformer, abolitionist, orator, writer, and statesman. After escaping from slavery in Maryland, he became a national leader of the abolitionist movement in Massachusetts and New York, during which he gained fame for his oratory and incisive antislavery writings. Accordingly, he was described by abolitionists in his time as a living counterexample to enslavers' arguments that enslaved people lacked the intellectual capacity to function as independent American citizens. Northerners at the time found it hard to believe that such a great orator had once been enslaved. It was in response to this disbelief that Douglass wrote his first autobiography.
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John Mercer Langston was an American abolitionist, attorney, educator, activist, diplomat, and politician. He was the founding dean of the law school at Howard University and helped create the department. He was the first president of what is now Virginia State University, a historically black college. He was elected a U.S. Representative from Virginia and wrote From the Virginia Plantation to the National Capitol; Or, the First and Only Negro Representative in Congress From the Old Dominion.
Jeremiah Haralson, was a politician from Alabama who served as a state legislator and was among the first ten African-American United States Congressmen. Born into slavery in Columbus, Georgia, Haralson became self-educated while enslaved in Selma, Alabama. He was a leader among freedmen after the American Civil War.
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Charles Remond Douglass was the third and youngest son of Frederick Douglass and his first wife Anna Murray Douglass. He was the first African-American man to enlist in the military in New York during the Civil War, and served as one of the first African-American clerks in the Freedmen's Bureau in Washington, D.C.
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Jeremiah Daniel Baltimore was an engineer and educator in Washington, DC. For many years, he was an engineer in the service of the United States Navy and served as chief engineer at the Freedmen's Hospital. He was also a teacher of mechanics, and was responsible for mechanical instruction in the African American schools in the city from 1890 to 1922. He was on the trial board of the Naval battleship USS Texas (1892) and was among the organizers and officers of the Potomac Hospital and Training School. In 1903 he was elected a member of the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia. In 1915 he was made member of the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Art, Manufactures, and Commerce of London.
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