Sunday, 28 June 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " OSCAR DUNN " WAS ONE OF THREE AFRICAN AMERICAN WHO SERVED AS A REPUBLICAN LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR OF LOUISIANIAN DURING THE ERA OF RECONSTRUCTION : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK HEROES "

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Oscar Dunn


Oscar Dunn
Oscar Dunn.jpg
11th Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana
In office
1868 – November 22, 1871
GovernorHenry C. Warmoth
Preceded byAlbert Voorhies
Succeeded byP.B.S. Pinchback
Personal details
BornOscar James Dunn
1826
New Orleans, Louisiana, US
DiedNovember 22, 1871
New Orleans, Louisiana
Resting placeSt. Louis Cemetery No. 2 in New Orleans
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Ellen Boyd Marchand
ChildrenThree adopted children from Ellen's prior marriage
OccupationMusician; businessman
ReligionAfrican Methodist Episcopal
Oscar James Dunn (1826 – November 22, 1871) was one of three African Americans who served as a Republican Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana during the era of Reconstruction.[1]
In 1868, Dunn became the first elected black lieutenant governor of a U.S. state. He ran on the ticket headed by Henry Clay Warmoth, formerly of Illinois. After Dunn died in office, then-state Senator P. B. S. Pinchback, another black Republican, became lieutenant governor and thereafter governor for a 34-day interim period.

Biography


Oscar James Dunn, Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana 1868–1871, National Archive Mathew Brady Collection
Oscar James Dunn was born into slavery in 1826 in New Orleans. As his mother Maria Dunn was enslaved, he took her status under slave law of the time. His father James Dunn was free, having been emancipated in 1819 by his master. James was born into slavery in Petersburg, Virginia and had been transported to the Deep South in the forced migration of more than one million African Americans from the Upper South.
He was bought by James H. Caldwell of New Orleans, who founded the St. Charles Theatre and New Orleans Gas Light Company. Dunn worked for Caldwell as a skilled carpenter for decades, including after his emancipation by Caldwell in 1819.
After being emancipated, Dunn married Maria, then enslaved, and they had two children, Oscar and Jane. (Slave marriages were not then recognized under the law.) By 1832 Dunn had earned enough money as a carpenter to purchase the freedom of his wife and both children. Thus, they gained the status of free Blacks decades before the American Civil War. But, as English speakers, they were not part of the culture of free people of color, who were primarily of French descent, Catholic religion and culture.
James Dunn continued to work as a carpenter for his former master Caldwell. His wife Maria Dunn ran a boarding house for actors and actresses who were in the city to perform at the Caldwell theatres. Together they were able to pay for education for their children. Having studied music, Dunn became both an accomplished musician and an instructor of the violin.

Early life

Oscar Dunn was apprenticed as a young man to a plastering and painting contractor, A. G. Wilson. (He had verified Dunn's free status in the Mayor's Register of Free People of Color 1840–1864.) On November 23, 1841, the contractor reported Dunn as a runaway in a newspaper ad in the New Orleans Times-Picayune.[citation needed] Dunn must have gone back to work, because he progressed in the world.
Dunn was an English-speaking free Black in a city where the racial caste system was the underpinning of daily life. Ethnic French, including many free people of color, believed their culture was more subtle and flexible than that brought by the English-speaking residents who came to the city in the early-to-mid-19th century after the Louisiana Purchase and began to dominate it in number. Free people of color had been established as a separate class of merchants, artisans, and property owners, many of who had educations. But, American migrants from the South dismissed their special status, classifying society in binary terms, as black or white, despite a long history of interracial relations in their own history.
Dunn joined Richmond Lodge #4, one of a number of fraternal organizations that expanded in New Orleans, out of the Ohio Lodge during the 19th century. In the latter 1850s, he rose to Master and Grand Master of the lodge. Author Joseph A. Walkes, Jr., a Prince Hall Freemason, credits Dunn with outstanding conduct of Masonic affairs in Louisiana.[2][page needed] As a Freemason, Dunn developed his leadership skills, and established a wide network and power base in the black community that was useful for his later political career.

Marriage and family

In December 1866, Dunn married the widow Ellen Boyd Marchand, born free as the daughter of Henry Boyd and his wife of Ohio. He adopted her three children, Fannie (9), Charles (7) and Emma (5). The couple had no children together. In 1870, the Dunn family residence was located on Canal Street, one block west of South Claiborne Avenue and within walking distance of Straight University and the St. James A.M.E. church complex, where they were members.

Reconstruction era and politics

Dunn began to work to achieve equality for the millions of Blacks freed by passage of the Thirteenth Amendment, ratified after the American Civil War. He actively promoted and supported the Universal Suffrage Movement; advocated land ownership for all Blacks; taxpayer-funded education of all Black children; and equal protection of the laws under theFourteenth Amendment. He joined the Republican Party, many of whose members supported suffrage for Blacks.
Dunn opened an employment agency that assisted in finding jobs for the freedmen. He was appointed as Secretary of the Advisory Committee of the Freedmen's Savings and Trust Company of New Orleans, established by the Freedmen's Bureau. As the city and region struggled to convert to a free labor system, Dunn worked to ensure that recently freed slave were treated fairly by former planters, who insisted on hiring by year-long contracts. In 1866, he organized the People's Bakery, an enterprise owned and operated by the Louisiana Association of Workingmen.
Elected to the New Orleans city council in 1867, Dunn was named chairman of a committee to review Article 5 of the City Charter. He proposed that "all children between the ages of 6–18 be eligible to attend public schools and that the Board of Aldermen shall provide for the education of all children ... without distinction to color." In the state Constitutional Convention of 1867–1868, this resolution was enacted into Louisiana law and laid the foundation for the public education system, established for the first time in the state by the bi-racial legislature.
Dunn was very active in local, state and federal politics; with connections to U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant and U.S. Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts. A White candidate for the nomination, W. Jasper Blackburn, the former mayor of Minden in Webster Parish, by a vote of fifty-four to twenty-seven.
The Warmoth-Dunn Republican ticket was elected, 64,941 to 38,046. This was considered the rise of the Radical Republican influence in state politics. Dunn was inaugurated lieutenant governor on June 13, 1868. He was also the President pro tempore of the Louisiana State Senate. He was a member of the Printing Committee of the legislature, which controlled a million-dollar budget. He also served as President of the Metropolitan Police with an annual budget of nearly one million dollars. It struggled to maintain peace in a volatile political atmosphere, especially after the New Orleans Riot of 1866. In 1870, Dunn served on the Board of Trustees and Examining Committee for Straight University, a historically black college founded in the city.
The Republicans developed severe internal conflicts. Although elected with Warmoth, as the governor worked toward Fusionist goals, Dunn became allied with the Custom House faction, which was led by Stephen B. Packard and tied in with federal patronage jobs. They had differences with the Warmoth-Pinchback faction, and challenged it for leadership of the Republican party. Warmoth had been criticized for appointing white Democrats to state positions, encouraging alliances with Democrats, and his failure to advance civil rights for African Americans.[3] William Pitt Kellogg, whom Warmoth had helped gain election as US Senator in 1868, also allied with Packard[3] and was later elected as governor of the state.
Because of Dunn's wide connections and influence in the city, his defection to the Custom House faction meant that he would take many Republican ward clubs with him in switching allegiance, especially those made up of African Americans rather than Afro-Creoles (the mixed race elite that had been established as free before the war.) For the Radical Republicans, the city was always more important to its political power than were the rural parishes.[3]
Dunn made numerous political enemies during this period. According to The New York Times, Dunn "had difficulties with Harry Lott", a Rapides Parish member of the Louisiana House of Representatives (1868–1870, 1870–1872).[citation needed] He also had differences with his eventual successor as lieutenant governor, State Senator P.B.S. Pinchbackover policy, leadership, and direction.

Sudden death

On November 22, 1871, Dunn died at the age of 45 at home after a brief and sudden illness. He had been campaigning for the upcoming state and presidential elections. There was speculation that he was poisoned by political enemies, but no evidence was found.
The Dunn funeral was reported as one of the largest in New Orleans. As many as 50,000 people lined Canal Street for the procession, and newspapers across the nation reported the event. State officials, masonic lodges, and civic and social organizations participated in the procession from the St. James A.M.E. church to his grave site. He was interred in the Cassanave family mausoleum at St. Louis Cemetery No. 2.

Honors

W.E.B. Du Bois, leading civil rights activist, later called Dunn "an unselfish, incorruptible leader."[4]
The New Orleans Times-Picayune published a poem the day after Dunn's death in his honor, entitled The Death Struggle:
My back is to the wall
And my face is to my foes;
I've lived a life of combat,
And borne what no one knows.
But in this mortal struggle
I stand—poor speck of dust,
Defiant—self-reliant,
To die—if die I must.

Survivors

After his death, his widow Ellen was appointed by the mayor of New Orleans to the position of municipal archives director. Several years later, on November 23, 1875, she married J. Henri Burch. A former state senator from East Baton Rouge Parish, he had been an ally of her late husband as part of the Customhouse faction. The Burch family resided in New Orleans and continued there after the withdrawal of federal troops and end of Reconstruction in 1877.

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