Henry Mayson

Henry Mayson (born c. 1835, also known as Henry Mason) was a delegate to the 1868 Mississippi Constitutional Convention and a state legislator in Mississippi.[1]

Mason was a leader in the African American community in Vicksburg, Mississippi.[2] He served in the Mississippi House of Representatives and edited the Colored Citizen.[3] It was the first of several newspapers for African Americans published in Mississippi during the Reconstruction era.[4] He was one of the founders of a benevolent aid society in Bolivar County in 1871.[5] A 1910 publication of the Mississippi Historical Society described him as an illiterate former African American political leader living in Monticello, Mississippi[6] and referred to him as "old darkery".[6]

References

  1. "Henry Mayson – Against All Odds".
  2. "henry mason mississippi - Google Search". www.google.com.
  3. Thompson, Julius Eric (July 2, 2001). Black Life in Mississippi: Essays on Political, Social, and Cultural Studies in a Deep South State. University Press of America. ISBN 9780761819226 via Google Books.
  4. Suggs, Henry L. (1993). "Reviewed work: The Black Press in Mississippi, 1865-1985, Julius e. Thompson". The Business History Review. 67 (4): 651–653. doi:10.2307/3116813. JSTOR 3116813. S2CID 157781396.
  5. "Laws of the State of Mississippi". Richard C. Langdon. July 2, 1871 via Google Books.
  6. Society, Mississippi Historical (July 2, 1910). "Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society" via Google Books.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.