*This date marks the birth of Francis Louis Cardozo in 1837.
He was a Black minister, educator, and politician; the first African American South Carolinian to hold a government office. Cardozo was born free in Charleston, South Carolina to a prominent Jewish businessman and economist, Isaac N. Cardozo, and a free African American woman, whose name is unknown.
learn more*Francis Dumas’s birth is celebrated on this date in 1837. He was a Black Creole plantation owner, slaveholder, and Union Army officer. Francis E. Ernest Dumas, born in Louisiana, was the son of plantation owner Joseph Dumas and was an octoroon from his mother’s side. He spoke five languages and had lived in France for […]
learn more*William Hall was born on this date in 1827. He was a Black Canadian mariner.
learn moreOn this date we mark the birth of Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback. He was a Black Civil War officer and politician.
learn more*Robert Shaw was born on this date in 1837. He was a white-American officer in the Union Army. Robert Gould Shaw II was born in Boston to abolitionists Francis George and Sarah Blake (Sturgis) Shaw, well-known Unitarian philanthropists and intellectuals. The Shaws benefited from a large inheritance left by Shaw’s merchant grandfather and namesake […]
learn more*Benjamin W. Arnett was born on this date in 1838. He was a Black administrator, politician, and minister.
learn more*John Willis Menard was born on this date in 1838. He was a Black politician.
learn moreAlbion Tourgee was born on this date in 1838. He was a White American activist, judge, and author.
learn more*The birth of Bass Reeves is celebrated on this date in1838. He was a Black farmer and was one of the first African Americans to receive a commission as a Deputy U.S. Marshal west of the Mississippi River.
learn more*Victoria Woodhull was born on this date in 1838. She was a white-American leader of the women’s suffrage movement. Victoria California Claflin was born the seventh of ten children (six of whom survived to maturity) in the rural frontier town of Homer, Licking County, Ohio. Her mother, Madame Roxanna “Roxy” Hummel Claflin, was born to […]
learn more*The birth of Joseph R. Holmes is celebrated on this date in 1838. He was a Black shoemaker, farmer, and politician. Holmes published various articles critical of conservatives after the American Civil War. After being emancipated from Charlotte County, Virginia, he married Mary Clarke. They had three sons and one daughter. On October 23, 1867, Holmes and […]
learn more*Samuel Armstrong was born on this date in 1839. He was a white-American soldier, educator, abolitionist, and administrator. The third son of Christian missionary Richard Armstrong, Samuel Chapman Armstrong was born in Wailuku, Maui, Hawaii, the sixth of ten children. His mother, Clarissa Chapman Armstrong, grew up in a Congregational family in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. His father […]
learn moreThis date marks the birth of Robert Smalls in 1839. He was an Black slave who became a naval hero for the Union in the American Civil War (1861-65) and went on to serve as a congressman from South Carolina during Reconstruction (1865-77).
learn more*The USS Dale was commissioned on this date in 1839. Later called the Oriole, it was a sloop-of-war vessel in the United States Navy. It was the product of a non-patented invention by Benjamin Bradley. The Dale was one of six warships authorized to be constructed by The April 3, 1837 Congressional Act. The first of this group was Princeton, the Navy’s […]
learn more*The birth of Prince Romerson is celebrated on this date in c. 1840. He was a Native Hawaiian Union Army soldier. Living in the American Northeast before the war, Romerson enlisted in the Union Navy in 1863 as part of the Blockading Squadrons responsible for maintaining the blockade of the ports of the Confederacy. After […]
learn more