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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of | ||||||
3 | Representatives wish to recognize the life of John William | ||||||
4 | Edinburgh Thomas, the first African-American member of the | ||||||
5 | Illinois General Assembly; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, John W.E. Thomas was elected, as a State | ||||||
7 | Representative, to the 30th Illinois
General Assembly in | ||||||
8 | November of 1876, a time when many Illinoisans living still had | ||||||
9 | memories of when the Prairie State was a frontier and they | ||||||
10 | themselves were facing the
challenges of settling it and using | ||||||
11 | it as land for crops and railroads; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, John W.E. Thomas was also a pioneer; he was born a | ||||||
13 | slave on May 1, 1847 in Montgomery,
Alabama; he learned early | ||||||
14 | how to read and write, a craft which many of his peers were | ||||||
15 | also eager
to learn; as a teenager during the American Civil | ||||||
16 | War, he engaged in the
dangerous work of teaching literacy to | ||||||
17 | more than 3 dozen African-Americans, a crime
under the laws of | ||||||
18 | the Confederacy; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, During the Civil War, the Confederacy imposed | ||||||
20 | martial law and military justice upon
African-Americans who | ||||||
21 | violated its laws within their borders; facing these dangers, | ||||||
22 | John W.E. Thomas was supported by his wife and companion, Maria |
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1 | Reynolds, whom he married in 1864; and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, After the war, John W.E. Thomas, Maria, and their | ||||||
3 | daughter Hester Thomas moved to Chicago in late
1869 or early | ||||||
4 | 1870; the Thomas family found a fast-growing pioneer city | ||||||
5 | filled with
wooden buildings, small factories, and small shops; | ||||||
6 | John opened a live-in grocery store
on Federal Street near the | ||||||
7 | railroad tracks; he and his family became worshippers at Olivet
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8 | Baptist Church, a fast-growing, African-American-oriented | ||||||
9 | place of worship in their now-vanished
South Loop neighborhood; | ||||||
10 | and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, As well as his grocery store, John W.E. Thomas | ||||||
12 | continued his activities as a school teacher; with a
special | ||||||
13 | emphasis on adult and African-American education, his work | ||||||
14 | helped people left out
of the early public schools of the time; | ||||||
15 | a major Chicago newspaper, the Chicago "InterOcean",
paid | ||||||
16 | tribute to him after he "established the first school for | ||||||
17 | colored [sic] people
in Chicago, being himself a teacher. The | ||||||
18 | child and the gray-haired freedman, side by side,
learned their | ||||||
19 | letters in his home."; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, During the years that followed the Chicago Fire of | ||||||
21 | 1871, semi-skilled and skilled craft labor was in tremendous | ||||||
22 | demand in Chicago construction and manufacturing; trends | ||||||
23 | encouraged
white and black Chicagoans to work together for |
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1 | economic growth; this economic
cooperation led, in turn, to | ||||||
2 | political cooperation; and
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3 | WHEREAS, Olivet Baptist Church and its members, many of | ||||||
4 | them small business people, were treated as
a part of the | ||||||
5 | Chicago Republican Party; church leaders, including John W.E. | ||||||
6 | Thomas, were chosen to
represent the Third Ward at the Cook | ||||||
7 | County GOP convention of 1874; and
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8 | WHEREAS, In 1876, party leaders chose John W.E. Thomas as | ||||||
9 | one of the South Side's candidates to run in
November for the | ||||||
10 | Illinois House; the young teacher and grocer had to face | ||||||
11 | substantial
opposition, including opposition on racial | ||||||
12 | grounds, to win election; press clippings from the
race show | ||||||
13 | that some of the opposition came from his own Republican Party; | ||||||
14 | making
personal speaking appearances throughout his district, | ||||||
15 | he courageously overcame these
criticisms and was elected with | ||||||
16 | 11,532 votes to represent what was then the Second District
in | ||||||
17 | Springfield; he served in 1877 and 1878, years that saw hard | ||||||
18 | work in Springfield as the
new State Capitol was being built; | ||||||
19 | in 1878, he suffered the tragic loss of his
wife Maria; he | ||||||
20 | would remarry twice and father 7 additional children, 4 of whom
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21 | would join Hester in living to-adulthood; and
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22 | WHEREAS, John W.E. Thomas left the Illinois House in 1879 | ||||||
23 | to study law and win admission to the Illinois bar; in
1882 and |
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1 | 1884, he was elected to serve 2 additional terms in | ||||||
2 | Springfield, this time from
the Third District in Chicago; as a | ||||||
3 | lawyer, he was appointed to the House Judiciary
Committee; he | ||||||
4 | sponsored and persuaded his committee colleagues to support | ||||||
5 | Illinois's first
Civil Rights law to ban racial discrimination | ||||||
6 | in public places; even as "Jim Crow" laws were
becoming the | ||||||
7 | norm in states like his native Alabama, Illinois was enacting | ||||||
8 | this pioneer
law to try to reduce this conduct within the | ||||||
9 | State; and | ||||||
10 | WHEREAS, John W.E. Thomas lived the rest of his life in | ||||||
11 | Chicago, practicing law and working successfully in real
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12 | estate; as a lifelong Republican, he ran for the Illinois | ||||||
13 | electoral college of 1892-93 as a
supporter of President | ||||||
14 | Benjamin Harrison; he died in Chicago on December 18, 1899;
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15 | upon his death, local newspapers credited him with being one of | ||||||
16 | the wealthiest men on
Chicago's South Side, with an estate | ||||||
17 | valued at more than $100,000 in gold; and
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18 | WHEREAS, While John W.E. Thomas did not present himself to | ||||||
19 | the Chicago press as a practitioner of racial identity
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20 | politics, he was aware of his standing as the first | ||||||
21 | African-American member of the Illinois
General Assembly; the | ||||||
22 | way he described his feelings was with these words: "Without
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23 | egotism, I may be permitted to say that it was a proud day for | ||||||
24 | me and for the colored people
of the great Republican State of |
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1 | Illinois when, for the first time, and that in the Centennial
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2 | year, a colored man took his seat in the Legislature of that | ||||||
3 | state which gave to the world the
emancipator of my race, the | ||||||
4 | martyred Lincoln."; and
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5 | WHEREAS, John W.E. Thomas' reference to the Centennial year | ||||||
6 | of the United States of America, 1876, shows
where he stands in | ||||||
7 | the history of Illinois and the history of our Nation; | ||||||
8 | therefore, be it
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9 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
10 | NINETY-NINTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we | ||||||
11 | commend the work, success, and memory of John William Edinburgh | ||||||
12 | Thomas, the first African-American member of the Illinois House | ||||||
13 | and the Illinois General
Assembly; and be it further | ||||||
14 | RESOLVED, That we commend the work of David A. Joens, | ||||||
15 | Archivist of the State of Illinois,
for his work in researching | ||||||
16 | the life of John W.E. Thomas, published in his 2012 book "From | ||||||
17 | Slave to State Legislator: John W.E. Thomas, Illinois First
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18 | African American Lawmaker", published by the Southern Illinois | ||||||
19 | University Press; and be it further
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20 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies this resolution should be | ||||||
21 | presented to the Black Caucus of the Illinois General Assembly | ||||||
22 | and to David A. Joens of the Illinois State Archives.
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