Samuel A. McElwee (1857-1914) was born a slave in Madison County, TN to Robert and Georgianna McElwee. After the Civil War was over, and following a general inclination of former slaves to move, the McElwee family relocated to Haywood County ( the next county west) in 1866.
During the years following this move when he was nine or ten
years old, Samuel obtained a education in local freedmen schools, and
attended Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio (Oberlin College was one of the
first institutions of higher education to admit African Americans) He taught
for a few years (could not have taught but a year or two) and then
entered Fisk University, graduating in 1883.
At this time, he had already won a a political election, when he won election to
the Tennessee General Assembly at age 25 or 26.
"TENNESSEE: A GUIDE TO THE STATE"2
chapter 10 ( Compiled and Written by the Federal Writers' Project of the Work
Projects Administration for the State of Tennessee) says:
"Perhaps the most dramatic character in law and politics was Samuel A. McElwee.
While still a student at Fisk University he campaigned for a seat in the
legislature and won election in January 1883. He was famed for his eloquence,
won many friends and success as a criminal lawyer, a field in which few Negroes
had found opportunity".
He also represented Haywood County at the 1884 Annual State Colored Men's Convention in Nashville.
1888 Listed among the Black Delegates to the Republican National Convention of 1888
Republican Presidential candidate Benjamin Harrison abandoned race as a campaign issue to maintain party unity necessary to his election. Harrison instead championed protective tariffs, and won more Southern support than any post-Reconstruction candidate. The Chronological History of the Negro in America, p. 300.
19001 found the family in Nashville, Davidson County, Ward 15-Dictrict 104- all listed as black Marshall or Mitchell Street .
McElwee, Samuel age 52 born June 1857 TN head of household
parents born TN
McElwee, Georgia M. born Nov 1868 TN, wife- married 11 years- mother of six
children, two living
McElwee, Ethel S age 10 /May 1890 daughter
McElwee, Helen C age 07/ Nov 1892 daughter
SHELDON, Georgia A. age 72 born Feb 1849 TN. widowed- mother in law-
mother of two children, one living - father born NY, mother born TN.
REFER::1.
Nashville Ward 15, Davidson, Tennessee; Roll: T623 1565; Page: 16B; Enumeration
District: 104.
REFER: 2. http://newdeal.feri.org/guides/tnguide/cont.htm
There were still McElwee families in Haywood County in 1900.
He became a lawyer and the most powerful Republican party leader
in Haywood County during Reconstruction. He served in the Tennessee General
Assembly for three terms: 1882-1888.
McElwee was born in Madison County, Tennessee, to Robert and Georgianna
McElwee. During the general movement of former slaves, the McElwee family
relocated to Haywood County in 1866. Samuel attended local freedmen's schools
and Oberlin College in Ohio before starting a teaching career in Alabama,
Mississippi, and Tennessee. He entered Fisk University in 1878 and was graduated
in 1883 at age twenty-six.
McElwee represented Haywood County at the 1884 Annual
State Colored Men's Convention in Nashville. While serving in the legislature,
McElwee attended Nashville's Central Tennessee College's law school and obtained
his law degree in 1886. In Haywood County, his political base, McElwee practiced
law, operated a grocery store, and dabbled in real-estate transactions.
McElwee's political career began in 1882, when he won
election to the Tennessee General Assembly. Three other black men, all fellow
Republicans, won election to the legislature. Young McElwee had the benefit of
the experiences of other black men who previously had served in the General
Assembly: Davidson County's Sampson W. Keeble had won election in 1872; Thomas
A. Sykes also had won a seat from Davidson County in 1880. Moreover, during the
period 1880-1883, predominantly black Haywood County had other blacks who held
public offices: Green Estes, county trustee, and William Winfield, registrar.
McElwee became a notable orator in the General Assembly, where he fought
constantly for equal educational opportunities for the freedmen. He also worked
with his fellow black legislators to defeat bills involving Jim Crowism and
contract labor.
McElwee's political career came to an abrupt end in 1888. The white
Democrats and Conservatives used fraud, intimidation, and terrorism to take the
elections in the heavily black areas of Haywood and neighboring Fayette
counties. McElwee received less than 600 votes and was forced to flee, as a
group of brave black men guarded his exit.
Determined that they would not be ruled by "Negroes and Republicans,"
the conservatives, the radical whites, and the neo-Confederates began to
"redeem" Tennessee government in 1879 through poll taxes, terrorism, and
intimidation of blacks at the polls. The Tennessee General Assembly passed the
South's first Jim Crow law in 1881. By 1888, although Haywood County blacks
outnumbered the whites, the blacks stayed away from the polls rather than pay
the poll tax and risk losing their sharecrop jobs. From that point through the
1960s, the whites continued to use economic reprisals, domination of land
ownership, illegal manipulation of court records (deeds), lynchings, and
outright terrorism to keep the Racks in Haywood and Fayette counties under
control and away from the polls.
In his book, Lifting the Veil: A Political History of Struggles for
Emancipation (1993), former Tennessee State University Professor Richard A.
Couto focused on Haywood County and discussed the career of McElwee. Couto noted
that McElwee was the last African American to win a county-wide election in
Haywood County.
McElwee settled in Nashville. On June 6, 1888, he married his second
wife, mulatto Georgia M. Shelton. To keep the vicious whites from taking the
McElwee family lands in Haywood County (as they effectively did to many black
families), McElwee hid the land titles under the name Georgianna Shelton
(his nearly white mother-in-law). He sold some of the lands, but as late as 1900
the McElwees still owned some 95 acres of land in Haywood County. After briefly
establishing a newspaper and a law practice in Nashville and losing four of his
six new children in infancy, the McElwees moved to Chicago in July of 1901. At
that time of Black Northern Migration, many blacks were heading to industrial
cities to escape white terrorism and oppression in the South. McElwee
established a lucrative law practice in Chicago, where he died on October 21,
1914. He was eulogized by at least three newspapers in Illinois and Tennessee.
8 Nov 2007