It has been some six decades since the Civil Rights Acts passed in 1964, yet considerable work remains in combating systemic racism and other forms of racial discrimination in America today. To better understand the sources of racism and how to challenge it, it is important to remember how white supremecist views dominated our institutions during our nation’s nearly 200 years of legal slavery.
While slavery seems somewhat distant, it is just a century ago that former slave owners – people who had owned human beings – served in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. Among them were former Confederate soldiers and pro-slavery advocates, who served in the late 19th century and early 20th century and often supported legislation codifying racial segregation and discriminatory voting laws.
To determine which members of Congress owned slaves in the 20th century, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed a database of Congressional slaveholders compiled by the Washington Post. According to the Post’s research, based on censuses and other historical records, more than 1,700 people who served in the U.S. Congress in the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries enslaved Black people at some point in their lives.
The Post used 18th- and 19th-century census records and considered more than 5,500 members of Congress who were born before 1840 and had reached age 21 at the time of the census taken just before the start of the Civil War in 1860.
When President Andrew Johnson pardoned Confederate soldiers in 1868, he returned to them full citizenship rights – except they could no longer own human beings. (The pardon excluded high ranking Confederate politicians and military leaders.) As full citizens, they could run for political office, thus shaping legislation and views on how former slaves were to be treated.
And most retained their white supremacist mindset. In the aftermath of the war and Reconstruction, states and localities enacted a series of Jim Crow laws as a backlash against the newly freed slaves. Also known as the Black Codes, Jim Crow statues set where former slaves could work and what they would be paid, among other restrictive clauses.
Although the people listed here served in the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, many also served at the state and local level where the Jim Crow laws originated before taking national office.
Most of these congressmen and senators did not hide their segregationist and bigoted views. Edmund Winston Pettus and George Washington Gordon served as Grand Dragons of the Ku Klux Klan. Rebecca Latimer Felton supported lynching, but thankfully only served one day in the Senate. The Ku Klux Klan was a not-so-secret organization. (See the world’s most powerful secret societies.)
Yet Mississippian Charles Edward Hooker changed his anti-union rhetoric after the war and criticized racial discriminatory laws. The nation eventually struck down Jim Crow laws and is today remembered as one of the most important moments in the Civil Rights Movement.
Click here to see the 16 slave owners who served in Congress in the 20th century
John Henry Hoffecker
> State served in: Delaware
> Start date: Mar 4, 1899
> End date: Jun 16, 1900
> Congresses served on: 56
John Henry Hoffecker was born near Smyrna, Delaware, in 1827. Educated as an engineer and originally a member of the Whig Party, he switched to the Republican Party in 1856. In 1898, Hoffecker was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, serving only one year before his death from a stroke in 1900.
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Donelson Caffery
> State served in: Louisiana
> Start date: Dec 31, 1892
> End date: Mar 3, 1901
> Congresses served on: 52,53,54,55,56
Donelson Caffery served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War in the 13th Louisiana Infantry Regiment. After the war, he owned a sugar plantation and worked as a lawyer. He served in the Louisiana State Senate before being appointed to the U.S. Senate in 1892, filling the unexpired term of Randall L. Gibson who died in office. A Democrat, he served in the Senate until 1901.
William Elliott
> State served in: South Carolina
> Start date: Mar 4, 1887
> End date: Mar 3, 1903
> Congresses served on: 50,51,52,54,55,56,57
Educated at Harvard University and the University of Virginia Law School, William Elliott began his law practice in 1861 but joined the Confederate Army at the outbreak of the war. He earned the rank of lieutenant colonel. Elliott was first elected to the 50th Congress in 1887 and served until 1903.
After leaving Congress, he served as commissioner of the U.S. to mark the graves of Confederate dead in the north, a position he was appointed to by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1906. He served in that position until his death in 1907.
Charles Edward Hooker
> State served in: Mississippi
> Start date: Mar 5, 1875
> End date: Mar 3, 1903
> Congresses served on: 44,45,46,47,50,51,52,53,57
After serving as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives, Charles Edward Hooker represented the state as secession commissioner. He joined the Confederate Army as a private and was later promoted to lieutenant and captain of the First Regiment of Mississippi Light Artillery. Still, after the war, records suggest Hooker criticized racial discrimination.
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George Graham Vest
> State served in: Missouri
> Start date: Mar 4, 1879
> End date: Mar 3, 1903
> Congresses served on: 46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57
A strong advocate for slavery during the Missouri secesson crisis, George Graham Vest sided with the Confederacy and authored the Secession Ordinance passed by the Missouri legislature in 1861. Vest reportedly originated the phrase “history is written by the victors,” which was used to justify the “Lost Cause” philosophy that championed the Confederate cause. Despite his advocacy for the South, he once defended an African-American man accused of murder and got the man acquited.
Francis Marion Cockrell
> State served in: Missouri
> Start date: Mar 4, 1875
> End date: Mar 3, 1905
> Congresses served on: 44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58
At the beginning of the Civil War, Francis Marion Cockrell joined the Missouri State Guard as a captain. He was eventually promoted to colonel of the Confederate States Army in the 2nd Missouri Regiment in 1862. Cockrell commanded a brigade during the Vicksburg Campaign.
After the war, he served in the U.S. Senate from 1875 to 1905 as a Senator from Missouri. President Theodore Roosevelt appointed Cockrell to the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1905. In that job, he negotiated the boundary between Texas and the New Mexico Territory, which was slated to become a state.
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William Brimage Bate
> State served in: Tennessee
> Start date: Mar 4, 1887
> End date: Mar 9, 1905
> Congresses served on: 50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59
A supporter of succession prior to the Civil War, William Brimage Bate owned slaves and fought for the Confederacy, rising to the rank of major general and leading a division in the Army of Tennessee. Fighting in several major battles, Bate was seriously wounded twice. He served as the 23rd governor of Tennessee and U.S. Senator from 1887 until his death in 1905.
Rufus Ezekiel Lester
> State served in: Georgia
> Start date: Mar 4, 1889
> End date: Jun 16, 1906
> Congresses served on: 51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59
A Civil War veteran, Rufus Ezekiel Lester served as a member of the Georgia State Senate from 1870-1879 and Savannah Mayor from 1883 to 1889. Elected to the 51st U.S. Congress in 1889 as a Democrat, he served until his death in 1906.
John Tyler Morgan
> State served in: Alabama
> Start date: Mar 4, 1877
> End date: Jun 11, 1907
> Congresses served on: 45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60
John Tyler Morgan owned slaves before the Civil War, and during the war, he served as general in the Confederate States Army. An ardent supporter of Jim Crow laws, states rights, and racial segregation during Reconstruction, Morgan served six terms in the U.S. Senate representing Alabama.
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Edmund Winston Pettus
> State served in: Alabama
> Start date: Mar 4, 1897
> End date: Jul 27, 1907
> Congresses served on: 55,56,57,58,59,60
Edmund Winston Pettus is considered by many as racial terrorist for his exgreme pro-slavery views and actions against African Americans before and after the Civil War. Pettus served as senior officer in the Confederate States Army, commanding an infantry unit in the western theater during the Civil War.
After the war, he served in the U.S. Senate from 1897 to 1907 and was also a Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon. The Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, site of one of the bloodiest battles of the Civil Rights Movement in 1965, is named after him.
James Bennett McCreary
> State served in: Kentucky
> Start date: Mar 4, 1885
> End date: Mar 3, 1909
> Congresses served on: 49,50,51,52,53,54,58,59,60
James Bennett McCreary left his law practice to join the 11th Kentucky Cavalry during the Civil War, fighting under Confederate General John Hunt Morgan. He was captured by Union forces at the Battle of Buffington Island in Ohio and West Virginia in 1863. In 1884, he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives where he served for six terms.
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James Gordon
> State served in: Mississippi
> Start date: Dec 27, 1909
> End date: Feb 22, 1910
> Congresses served on: 61
During the Civil War, James Gordon was a colonel in the Confederate Army, and as a special commissioner, he organized a visit to European countries in 1864 on behalf of the South. When he returned to North Carolina in January 1865, he was captured but fled to Canada. He returned to the U.S. to successfully defend himself against charges he was part of the conspiracy to assassinate President Abraham Lincoln. Gordon was appointed to fill the vacancy left by the death of Anselm J. McLaurin and served from 1909 to 1910.
George Washington Gordon
> State served in: Tennessee
> Start date: Mar 4, 1907
> End date: Aug 9, 1911
> Congresses served on: 61,62,60
George Washington Gordon rose to the rank of general in the Confederate Army. After the Civil War, Gordon practiced law in Pulaski, Tennessee, but was also involved in the formation of the Ku Klux Klan, rising to the position of Grand Dragon for the Realm of Tennessee. His book, “Precept,” outlined the Klan’s purpose and principles. He served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1907 until his death in 1911.
Augustus Octavius Bacon
> State served in: Georgia
> Start date: Mar 4, 1895
> End date: Feb 14, 1914
> Congresses served on: 54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63
A Confederate soldier and segregationist, Augustus Octavius Bacon was a slave owner who served as a Democratic senator from Georgeia. In the senate, he rose to the position of president pro tempore. After his death, he established a “whites only” park in Macon, Georgia, in his will. During the 1960s Civil Rights movement, the Supreme Court struck down that provision, and the land was eventually sold for private use.
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William Richardson
> State served in: Alabama
> Start date: Mar 4, 1899
> End date: Mar 31, 1914
> Congresses served on: 56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63
William Richardson enlisted in the 50th Regiment Alabama Infantry and was wounded and taken prisoner at the battle of Shiloh. After the war, Richardson studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1867. Elected to the 56th Congress to fill the vacancy left by the resignation of Joseph Wheeler, he was subsequently reelected to the 57th Congress and served six consecutive terms before his death in 1914.
Rebecca Latimer Felton
> State served in: Georgia
> Start date: Oct 3, 1922
> End date: Nov 21, 1922
> Congresses served on: 67
Rebecca Latimer Felton was the first woman to serve in the Senate. Nearly 88 years old, Felton served for only a day as a placeholder for Georgia Gov. Thomas W. Hardwick, who was running for the office. When another candidate, Walter F. George, won instead, he allowed Felton to take his seat for a single day when Congress reconvened. A suffragist and early feminist, Felton owned slaves and advocated for white supremacy and lynching.
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