fbpx
Wikipedia

R. C. O. Benjamin

R. C. O. Benjamin (March 31, 1855 – October 2, 1900) was a journalist, lawyer, and minister in the United States. He was an editor or contributor to numerous newspapers throughout the country, and may have been the first black editor of a white paper when he became editor of the Daily Sun In Los Angeles. He was also possibly the first black man admitted to the California bar, and may have been admitted to the bar in twelve states. In 1900 he was working as a prominent lawyer in Lexington Kentucky when he was beaten for helping register black voters by a white man who opposed his efforts. Later that day he was killed by the same man.

R. C. O. Benjamin
Benjamin in 1887
Born
Robert Charles O'Hara Benjamin

(1855-03-31)March 31, 1855
DiedOctober 2, 1900(1900-10-02) (aged 45)
Occupation(s)Journalist, lawyer, minister
Political partyRepublican
Personal
ReligionAfrican Methodist Episcopal

Early life and education edit

Robert Charles O'Hara Benjamin was born in St. Kitts on March 31, 1855. He attended compulsory schools until the age of eleven when he was sent to England for private tutoring, and then enrolled in Trinity College, Oxford University where he studied for three years. He left Oxford without receiving a degree and made a two year tour of the East Indies including Sumatra and Java. After returning to England, he sailed to New York City, arriving April 13, 1869. Ten days later he took a six month cruise to South America and the Caribbean as a cabin boy on the Lepanto captained by Cyrus E. Staples. The tour stopped in Venezuela, Curaçao, Demerara, and the West Indies. In the fall of 1869 he returned and settled in New York City.[1]

Early career edit

In New York he became associated with Henry Highland Garnet, Cornelius Vancott, Isaac Hayes, and Joe Howard, Jr. He took work as a soliciting agent for the paper, the New York Star, where Howard was an editor. In this position, he befriended J. J. Freeman, editor of the Progressive American, and Benjamin was made city editor of that paper. Around this time he was naturalized as a US citizen.[1]

In 1876, he campaigned for Republican Party presidential candidate Rutherford B. Hayes, who would win. As a result of his political efforts, Benjamin was appointed letter carrier in the New York Post office. After nine months, he resigned and moved to Kentucky where he worked as a school teacher in various places and began studying law. Among his tutors were ex-Congressman Reed and Kentucky politician Dave Smith. He then moved to Decatur, Alabama where he became principal of a public school, and then to Brinkley, Arkansas and finally Memphis, Tennessee. In Memphis, he continued to study law, now under Josiah Patterson. With Patterson's help, he was admitted to the bar in January 1880.[1] He was also admitted to the bar in Charlottesville, Virginia in the 1880s.[2]

Journalist, writer, and orator edit

He returned to journalism, and owned and edited a number of papers throughout the country, including the Colored Citizen in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the Chronicle in Evansville, Indiana, and the Negro American in Birmingham, Alabama, where he settled for some time.[1] In Birmingham 1887, together with A. L. Scott, Samuel Roebuck, George Turner, J. H. Thompson, Sandy Goodloe, D. A. Williams, A. T. Walker, William R. Pettiford, and J. T. Jones he incorporated the Robert Brown Elliot School of Technology in Birmingham, the first school of its kind for blacks in the U.S.[3] He also was a pamphlet writer, writing pamphlets on African-American history and issues. Further, he was a noted orator and often spoke out against lynchings and violence against blacks.[1] For his outspokenness, Benjamin was forced to leave Brinkley, Arkansas in 1879 and Birmingham in 1887.[4]

He was also noted as a poet, and his work was published in an anthology of nineteenth century African American poetry in 1992.[5]

California edit

In 1887, Benjamin moved to California where he was an editor for the Los Angeles Observer and the San Francisco Sentinel.[6] He was for some time the local editor of the Daily Sun In Los Angeles. The Sun was a white paper, and Benjamin may have been the first black man to edit a white journal.[7] In California, he became the first black man admitted to the bar in 1887. He practiced in San Francisco and may have been the first black lawyer to visit Oregon.[8] Benjamin is claimed to have been admitted to the bar in 12 states,[9] including Virginia, Tennessee, California, Rhode Island, and Alabama.[10]

Later career and death edit

 
Benjamin from his 1900 obituary in the Colored American

In December 1892, Benjamin married Lula M. Robinson. They had a son and a daughter.[4] In 1895, while practicing law in Rhode Island, Benjamin, who was ordained in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, was nominated to the position of chaplain of the United States House of Representatives.[11] In 1897, Benjamin, his wife, Lula, and their two children he returned to Lexington, Kentucky where he edited the Lexington Standard.[6] In 1900, he was an attorney for Caleb Powers and Richard "Tallow Dick" Combes in the assassination of governor-elect William Goebel.[12]

Murder edit

On October 2, 1900, he was murdered while helping to register blacks to vote in Lexington.[6] That day he chastised a white man, Michael Moynahan, for harassing a group of black men registering to vote. Moynahan beat Benjamin with a revolver, and was then arrested for assault. When Moynahan was released from jail that evening, he went to Benjamin's house and awaited his return. When Benjamin returned and saw Moynahan, he turned to run. Moynahan then shot Benjamin in the back six times. At his trial, Moynahan pleaded not-guilty for reasons of self defense and the case was dismissed.[13][14]

His life in Lexington is the subject of historic fiction told in first person narratives in the novel A Wounded Snake by Joseph G. Anthony.[15]

Benjamin was buried in Lexington's African Cemetery No. 2.[13] In 1910, a monument was dedicated at his grave site.[16]

Publications edit

  • Benjamin, R. C. O. Poetic gems, Peck & Allan, (Charlottesville, Va.) 1883.
  • Benjamin, R. C. O. Life of Toussaint L'Ouverture: Warrior and Statesman, with an Historical Survey of the Island of San Domingo from the Discovery of the Island by Christopher Columbus, in 1492, to the Death of Toussaint, in 1803. Vol. 1. Evening Express Print Company, 1888.
  • Benjamin, R. C. O. Don't : a book for girls. Valleau & Peterson, Book and Job Printers, (San Francisco), 1891.
  • Benjamin, R. C. O. The negro problem : and the method of its solution, an address delivered at the A.M.E. Zion Church, Portland, Oregon, June 3d, 1891. George E. Watkins Souvenir and Directory Publishing Co., (San Francisco) 1891.
  • Benjamin, R. C. O. Southern outrages; a statistical record of lawless doings. (Los Angeles, Cal.), 1894
  • Benjamin, R. C. O. Benjamin's pocket history of the American Negro : a story of thirty-one years, from 1863 to 1894. Marion Trint, (Providence, RI) 1894.
  • Benjamin, R. C. O. Light after darkness : being an up-to-date history of the American Negro. Daniel Murray Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress), Marshall & Beveridge, Printers, (Xenia, Ohio), 1896.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Simmons, William J. (1887) Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. George M. Rewell & Company, pp991-994
  2. ^ Smith 1999, p338, 485
  3. ^ [No Headline] The Appeal (Saint Paul, Minnesota) April 2, 1887, page 1, accessed October 12, 2016, at https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6995611/no_headline_the_appeal_saint_paul/
  4. ^ a b Appiah, Kwame Anthony, ed. Africana: The encyclopedia of the African and African American experience. Oxford University Press, 2005.
  5. ^ Sherman, Joan R., ed. African-American poetry of the nineteenth century: an anthology. University of Illinois Press, 1992. p288-292
  6. ^ a b c Rummel, Jack. African-American Social Leaders and Activists. Infobase Publishing, 2014. p10-11
  7. ^ Haley, James T. Afro-American Encyclopaedia, Or, The Thoughts, Doings, and Sayings of the Race: Embracing Addresses, Lectures, Biographical Sketches, Sermons, Poems, Names of Universities, Colleges, Seminaries, Newspapers, Books, and a History of the Denominations, Giving the Numerical Strength of Each. In Fact, it Teaches Every Subject of Interest to the Colored People, as Discussed by More Than One Hundred of Their Wisest and Best Men and Women. Illustrated with Beautiful Half-tone Engravings. Haley & Florida, 1895. p229-230
  8. ^ Smith 1999, p519, 537
  9. ^ Smith 1999, p485
  10. ^ Brundage, William Fitzhugh, ed. Under sentence of death: Lynching in the South. UNC Press Books, 1997. p215
  11. ^ For a Colored Chaplain, The Washington Times (Washington, DC), February 11, 1895, page 6, accessed January 17, 2017, at https://www.newspapers.com/clip/8416669/for_a_colored_chaplain_the_washington/
  12. ^ A Brave Editor Killed, The Colored American (Washington, DC) October 13, 1900, page 15, accessed January 17, 2017, at https://www.newspapers.com/clip/8416504/a_brave_editor_killed_the_colored/
  13. ^ a b Smith, Gerald L., Karen Cotton McDaniel, and John A. Hardin, eds. The Kentucky African American Encyclopedia. University Press of Kentucky, 2015.
  14. ^ Later in his life, Moyhahan would shoot at a patrolman and stab another, Patrolman Badly Cut, The Courier-Journal (Louisville, Kentucky), October 2, 1912, page 10, accessed January 17, 2017, at https://www.newspapers.com/clip/8416435/patrolman_badly_cut_the/
  15. ^ ANTHONY, JOSEPH G. (2018). A WOUNDED SNAKE. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press. ISBN 978-1-947504-08-0. OCLC 1052875030.
  16. ^ . 2006. Hathaway Museum. April 27, 2008. Archived from the original on October 2, 2011.
  17. ^ "Light after darkness : being an up-to-date history of the American Negro". Library of Congress. Retrieved November 24, 2019.

Sources edit

  • Smith Jr, J. Clay. Emancipation: The Making of the Black Lawyer, 1844–1944. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999.

benjamin, march, 1855, october, 1900, journalist, lawyer, minister, united, states, editor, contributor, numerous, newspapers, throughout, country, have, been, first, black, editor, white, paper, when, became, editor, daily, angeles, also, possibly, first, bla. R C O Benjamin March 31 1855 October 2 1900 was a journalist lawyer and minister in the United States He was an editor or contributor to numerous newspapers throughout the country and may have been the first black editor of a white paper when he became editor of the Daily Sun In Los Angeles He was also possibly the first black man admitted to the California bar and may have been admitted to the bar in twelve states In 1900 he was working as a prominent lawyer in Lexington Kentucky when he was beaten for helping register black voters by a white man who opposed his efforts Later that day he was killed by the same man R C O BenjaminBenjamin in 1887BornRobert Charles O Hara Benjamin 1855 03 31 March 31 1855St KittsDiedOctober 2 1900 1900 10 02 aged 45 Lexington KentuckyOccupation s Journalist lawyer ministerPolitical partyRepublicanPersonalReligionAfrican Methodist Episcopal Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early career 3 Journalist writer and orator 4 California 5 Later career and death 5 1 Murder 6 Publications 7 See also 8 References 9 SourcesEarly life and education editRobert Charles O Hara Benjamin was born in St Kitts on March 31 1855 He attended compulsory schools until the age of eleven when he was sent to England for private tutoring and then enrolled in Trinity College Oxford University where he studied for three years He left Oxford without receiving a degree and made a two year tour of the East Indies including Sumatra and Java After returning to England he sailed to New York City arriving April 13 1869 Ten days later he took a six month cruise to South America and the Caribbean as a cabin boy on the Lepanto captained by Cyrus E Staples The tour stopped in Venezuela Curacao Demerara and the West Indies In the fall of 1869 he returned and settled in New York City 1 Early career editIn New York he became associated with Henry Highland Garnet Cornelius Vancott Isaac Hayes and Joe Howard Jr He took work as a soliciting agent for the paper the New York Star where Howard was an editor In this position he befriended J J Freeman editor of the Progressive American and Benjamin was made city editor of that paper Around this time he was naturalized as a US citizen 1 In 1876 he campaigned for Republican Party presidential candidate Rutherford B Hayes who would win As a result of his political efforts Benjamin was appointed letter carrier in the New York Post office After nine months he resigned and moved to Kentucky where he worked as a school teacher in various places and began studying law Among his tutors were ex Congressman Reed and Kentucky politician Dave Smith He then moved to Decatur Alabama where he became principal of a public school and then to Brinkley Arkansas and finally Memphis Tennessee In Memphis he continued to study law now under Josiah Patterson With Patterson s help he was admitted to the bar in January 1880 1 He was also admitted to the bar in Charlottesville Virginia in the 1880s 2 Journalist writer and orator editHe returned to journalism and owned and edited a number of papers throughout the country including the Colored Citizen in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania the Chronicle in Evansville Indiana and the Negro American in Birmingham Alabama where he settled for some time 1 In Birmingham 1887 together with A L Scott Samuel Roebuck George Turner J H Thompson Sandy Goodloe D A Williams A T Walker William R Pettiford and J T Jones he incorporated the Robert Brown Elliot School of Technology in Birmingham the first school of its kind for blacks in the U S 3 He also was a pamphlet writer writing pamphlets on African American history and issues Further he was a noted orator and often spoke out against lynchings and violence against blacks 1 For his outspokenness Benjamin was forced to leave Brinkley Arkansas in 1879 and Birmingham in 1887 4 He was also noted as a poet and his work was published in an anthology of nineteenth century African American poetry in 1992 5 California editIn 1887 Benjamin moved to California where he was an editor for the Los Angeles Observer and the San Francisco Sentinel 6 He was for some time the local editor of the Daily Sun In Los Angeles The Sun was a white paper and Benjamin may have been the first black man to edit a white journal 7 In California he became the first black man admitted to the bar in 1887 He practiced in San Francisco and may have been the first black lawyer to visit Oregon 8 Benjamin is claimed to have been admitted to the bar in 12 states 9 including Virginia Tennessee California Rhode Island and Alabama 10 Later career and death edit nbsp Benjamin from his 1900 obituary in the Colored AmericanIn December 1892 Benjamin married Lula M Robinson They had a son and a daughter 4 In 1895 while practicing law in Rhode Island Benjamin who was ordained in the African Methodist Episcopal Church was nominated to the position of chaplain of the United States House of Representatives 11 In 1897 Benjamin his wife Lula and their two children he returned to Lexington Kentucky where he edited the Lexington Standard 6 In 1900 he was an attorney for Caleb Powers and Richard Tallow Dick Combes in the assassination of governor elect William Goebel 12 Murder edit On October 2 1900 he was murdered while helping to register blacks to vote in Lexington 6 That day he chastised a white man Michael Moynahan for harassing a group of black men registering to vote Moynahan beat Benjamin with a revolver and was then arrested for assault When Moynahan was released from jail that evening he went to Benjamin s house and awaited his return When Benjamin returned and saw Moynahan he turned to run Moynahan then shot Benjamin in the back six times At his trial Moynahan pleaded not guilty for reasons of self defense and the case was dismissed 13 14 His life in Lexington is the subject of historic fiction told in first person narratives in the novel A Wounded Snake by Joseph G Anthony 15 Benjamin was buried in Lexington s African Cemetery No 2 13 In 1910 a monument was dedicated at his grave site 16 Publications editBenjamin R C O Poetic gems Peck amp Allan Charlottesville Va 1883 Benjamin R C O Life of Toussaint L Ouverture Warrior and Statesman with an Historical Survey of the Island of San Domingo from the Discovery of the Island by Christopher Columbus in 1492 to the Death of Toussaint in 1803 Vol 1 Evening Express Print Company 1888 Benjamin R C O Don t a book for girls Valleau amp Peterson Book and Job Printers San Francisco 1891 Benjamin R C O The negro problem and the method of its solution an address delivered at the A M E Zion Church Portland Oregon June 3d 1891 George E Watkins Souvenir and Directory Publishing Co San Francisco 1891 Benjamin R C O Southern outrages a statistical record of lawless doings Los Angeles Cal 1894 Benjamin R C O Benjamin s pocket history of the American Negro a story of thirty one years from 1863 to 1894 Marion Trint Providence RI 1894 Benjamin R C O Light after darkness being an up to date history of the American Negro Daniel Murray Pamphlet Collection Library of Congress Marshall amp Beveridge Printers Xenia Ohio 1896 17 See also editList of first minority male lawyers and judges in CaliforniaReferences edit a b c d e Simmons William J 1887 Men of Mark Eminent Progressive and Rising George M Rewell amp Company pp991 994 Smith 1999 p338 485 No Headline The Appeal Saint Paul Minnesota April 2 1887 page 1 accessed October 12 2016 at https www newspapers com clip 6995611 no headline the appeal saint paul a b Appiah Kwame Anthony ed Africana The encyclopedia of the African and African American experience Oxford University Press 2005 Sherman Joan R ed African American poetry of the nineteenth century an anthology University of Illinois Press 1992 p288 292 a b c Rummel Jack African American Social Leaders and Activists Infobase Publishing 2014 p10 11 Haley James T Afro American Encyclopaedia Or The Thoughts Doings and Sayings of the Race Embracing Addresses Lectures Biographical Sketches Sermons Poems Names of Universities Colleges Seminaries Newspapers Books and a History of the Denominations Giving the Numerical Strength of Each In Fact it Teaches Every Subject of Interest to the Colored People as Discussed by More Than One Hundred of Their Wisest and Best Men and Women Illustrated with Beautiful Half tone Engravings Haley amp Florida 1895 p229 230 Smith 1999 p519 537 Smith 1999 p485 Brundage William Fitzhugh ed Under sentence of death Lynching in the South UNC Press Books 1997 p215 For a Colored Chaplain The Washington Times Washington DC February 11 1895 page 6 accessed January 17 2017 at https www newspapers com clip 8416669 for a colored chaplain the washington A Brave Editor Killed The Colored American Washington DC October 13 1900 page 15 accessed January 17 2017 at https www newspapers com clip 8416504 a brave editor killed the colored a b Smith Gerald L Karen Cotton McDaniel and John A Hardin eds The Kentucky African American Encyclopedia University Press of Kentucky 2015 Later in his life Moyhahan would shoot at a patrolman and stab another Patrolman Badly Cut The Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky October 2 1912 page 10 accessed January 17 2017 at https www newspapers com clip 8416435 patrolman badly cut the ANTHONY JOSEPH G 2018 A WOUNDED SNAKE Huron Ohio Bottom Dog Press ISBN 978 1 947504 08 0 OCLC 1052875030 Annual Reports 2006 Hathaway Museum April 27 2008 Archived from the original on October 2 2011 Light after darkness being an up to date history of the American Negro Library of Congress Retrieved November 24 2019 Sources editSmith Jr J Clay Emancipation The Making of the Black Lawyer 1844 1944 University of Pennsylvania Press 1999 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title R C O Benjamin amp oldid 1205933800, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.