This will be the last posting of the week. I will be in Charlotte for the next couple days and may have another portrait ready to post by Sunday night. Next week after I finish this current grouping of individuals, I will post an updated image of the entire mural.
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John Adams
Hyman was born into slavery on July 23, 1840 in Warren County, North Carolina.
Hyman's thirst for knowledge resulted in him being sold away from his family
for attempting to read a spelling book that was given to him by a sympathetic
white jeweler. He continued to seek knowledge at his new residence in Alabama
and was sold again for fear that he would influence other slaves. Hyman was
sold eight more times for his attempts to educate himself.
At the age of
25 Hyman was freed by the Thirteenth Amendment and returned to his family in
North Carolina. He quickly enrolled in school where he received an elementary
education. Hyman also became a landowner and merchant. Hyman, a Mason,
soon emerged as a leader of the post-Civil War North Carolina black community.
By 1868 John
Hyman was an active member of the Republican Party. Despite intimidation
attempts by the Ku Klux Klan, Hyman and 132 other Republicans were elected to a
constitutional convention which crafted a new constitution for the state of
North Carolina. The Constitution called for public education available to
all students and voting rights for African-American men.
Following the
1868 Constitutional Convention Hyman was elected to the North Carolina State
Senate from Warren County. He served in the State Senate until 1874. In 1872, Hyman was unsuccessful in a bid to become North Carolina’s first black
congressman when he campaigned in the state’s heavily African American Second
Congressional District. He ran again in 1874, winning against a white
Democrat. Hyman was the only Republican elected to Congress from North
Carolina that year. The election was contested, however, and Hyman’s term
ended before he was officially seated. Hyman ran again in 1876 and 1878.
Both times he was unsuccessful partly because of accusations of corruption.
While in
Congress, Hyman proposed federal funding for Civil War-related damages in his
district. He also called for the reimbursement of the freedmen and women
who had lost money in the Federally Chartered Freedman's Bank. However,
because his seat was challenged his entire term, Hyman was unable to fully make
his presence felt in Congress.
In 1878 Hyman returned to North
Carolina to farm and run a grocery and liquor store in Warrenton. He
continued to attract controversy. When members of the Warrenton Colored
Methodist Church accused him of embezzling church funds, he assaulted the
church’s minister and was arrested and fined for assault. As he was
increasingly ostracized by the local community, Hyman left Warrenton and returned
to Washington D.C. where he obtained a series of minor appointive posts
including special deputy collector of internal revenue, the U.S. Post Office
and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. John Adams Hyman died at age 51 on
September 14, 1891.
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