Research Catalog
Hiram Revels collection
- Title
- Hiram Revels collection, 1870-1948.
- Author
- Revels, Hiram R. (Hiram Rhoades), 1827?-1901.
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Status | Container | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Schomburg Center to submit a request in person. | reel 1 | Mixed material | Use in library | Sc Micro R-6478 reel 1 | Schomburg Center - Research & Reference |
Details
- Additional Authors
- Muelder, Hermann R. (Hermann Richard), 1905-
- Description
- 1 lin. ft.
- Summary
- Hiram Rhoades Revels served as a clergyman, first African American appointed to become a United States senator from a southern state during Reconstruction, and college president.
- The Hiram Revels Collection consists principally of a scrapbook of news clippings in addition to biographical articles about Revels.
- Donor/Sponsor
- Schomburg NEH Automated Access to Special Collections Project.
- Subjects
- Reproduction (note)
- Microfilm.
- Source (note)
- Cayton, Horace in 02/--/51
- Processing Action (note)
- Processed
- Call Number
- Sc Micro R-6478
- OCLC
- NYPW088000023-A
- Author
- Revels, Hiram R. (Hiram Rhoades), 1827?-1901.
- Title
- Hiram Revels collection, 1870-1948.
- Reproduction
- Microfilm. New York : New York Public Library. 1951. 1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm. (MN *ZZ-805)Microfilm. New York : New York Public Library, 1951. 1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm. (MN *ZZ-11020)
- Biography
- Revels began his political career as an alderman in Natchez, Miss. in 1868 and was elected to the Mississippi State Senate in 1869. The state legislature in January 1870 elected him to the U.S. Senate, and after acrimonious debate, the Senate seated him to fill the expired term of Jefferson Davis, and he served as senator from February 1870 until March 1871. Among other issues, Revels voted for enforcement of the Fifteenth Amendment. His political career, however was typified by some of his accommodationist views and practices.In the early 1870's Revels was named the first president of Alcorn College, a black school, in Rodney, Mississippi, but he was not an adept administrator and became caught between the demands of a white dominated legislature and some members of the faculty and student body who wanted him to be a more aggressive leader. Despite these problems, he served as president from 1871 to 1873 and again from 1876 to 1882.Revels and his wife, Phoebe Rebecca Bass Revels, had six daughters, including Susie Revels (1870-1943). She taught school in Mississippi until her marriage in 1896 to Horace Roscoe Cayton.
- Connect to:
- Added Author
- Muelder, Hermann R. (Hermann Richard), 1905-
- Research Call Number
- Sc Micro R-6478