192:. His mother died when he was four years old. As a child, he attended school, and at the age ten, he was apprenticed to the barber's business. He worked in an aristocratic shop, and Poindexter became acquainted with many Richmond leaders. He later moved to Ohio, settling in Columbus at the age of twelve. In Ohio, he continued to attend school, now privately, and to work as a barber, which again afforded him a variety of useful contacts. In the 1840s he married. After giving the baccalaureate sermon before the graduating class of the
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group associated with the
Underground Railroad. Other African-American active abolitionists in Columbus included David Jenkins, John Booker, Leslie Washington Sr, and John T. Ward and where helped by white abolitionists including Joseph Sullivant, James E. Coulter, L. G. Van Slyke, Samuel H. Smith, James M. Westwater, the Keltons, William Hanby, Phillip Doddridge, and Eli M. Pinney. In December 1848, Poindexter played an important role in bringing
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He frequently preached against slavery, working against the trend of many preachers failing to respond to claims that the Bible sanctioned slavery. In about 1857 he became president of the society called, "sons of protection," a position he held for 30 years, a secretive
African-American civil rights
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but was rejected by the state senate for political reasons in 1885. In 1887 he was appointed to a six-year term as a member of the Board of
Directors of the Ohio State Forestry Bureau and was reappointed twice more. In September 1888, he served as president of the Columbus Centennial Freedom
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and was a delegate to state conventions many times. In 1873, he was the first black man in Ohio nominated to run for a seat in the House of
Representatives. He was nominated by the Republican Party, but was defeated by the overwhelmingly Democratic electorate in Franklin County.
269:, serving as council vice-president. He was also appointed to fill a vacancy in the Board of Education and later elected to the position, from 1884 to 1893. He was appointed to a four-year term as trustee of the Institute for the Blind by Ohio Governor
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in
Columbus in the spring of 1840, was ordained in 1849, and became pastor of the Second Baptist Church in 1862, serving until 1893. He was a member of the Pastor's Union and later elected president of the union.
153:(1861–1865), he was involved in political activities in Columbus, serving on the City Council, the city Board of Education, the state Forestry Bureau, and as trustee of the Institute for the Blind and of
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Arnett, Benjamin
William, Centennial Jubilee of Freedom at Columbus, Ohio, Saturday, September 22, 1888 : orations, poems, and addresses. Aldine Printing House (Xenia, Ohio) 1888
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286:. He served as the first black foreman of an Ohio grand Jury. He was a frequent contributor to numerous newspapers and journals and worked closely with Presidents
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Simmons, Martha. Preaching with Sacred Fire: An
Anthology of African American Sermons, 1750 to the Present. WW Norton & Company, 2010. p322-323
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October 26, 1819 to
Evelina and Joseph Poindexter. His mother was black and Cherokee. Joseph was a white man and may have been a brother of
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In 1898 he resigned as pastor of the Second
Baptist Church, although he continued to preach. He died in Columbus on February 7, 1907, of
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Cole, Charles
Chester. A fragile capital: Identity and the early years of Columbus, Ohio. Ohio State University Press, 2001. p193-204
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Tom Betti, Doreen Uhas Sauer, On This Day in Columbus, Ohio History, Columbus Landmarks Foundation Arcadia Publishing, May 21, 2013
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Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner. Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p394-404
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Public Schools for Colored Children, Daily Ohio Statesman (Columbus, Ohio) January 27, 1869, page 3, accessed October 5, 2016 at
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societies and became a Baptist preacher. From the pulpit, he preached against slavery and for African-American rights. After the
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Franklin County at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, Historical Publishing Company (Franklin County, Ohio), 1901, p364
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Poindexter Resigns, The Cincinnati Enquirer (Cincinnati, Ohio) April 5, 1898, page 4, accessed October 5, 2016 at
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After the Civil War, Poindexter was a leading advocate for education of black children. He was a delegate to the
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No Headline, The Coschocton Democrat (Coshocton, Ohio) September 9, 1873, page 2, accessed October 5, 2016 at
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Kurtz, The Cincinnati Enquirer (Cincinnati, Ohio) June 15, 1898, page 6, accessed October 5, 2016 at
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American abolitionist, civil rights activist, politician & Baptist minister (1819-1907)
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Jubillee. He was appointed as a trustee for Wilberforce University in 1898 by governor
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The Eaton Democrat (Eaton, Ohio) April 23, 1885, page 1, accessed October 5, 2016 at
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Washington Bee (Washington, DC) June 4, 1887, page 3, accessed November 8, 2016 at
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https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6906071/no_headline_the_coschocton_democrat/
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Starting in 1880, he served two terms, four years, as a member of the
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https://www.newspapers.com/clip/7370010/no_headline_washington_bee/
338:"Church marks 200th anniversary of birth of Rev. James Poindexter"
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Poindexter is featured on a historical memorial in front of the
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and was survived by two grandchildren. The first public
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to Columbus to speak at a Free Soil Party Convention.
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19th-century Baptist ministers from the United States
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174:James Preston Poindexter was born in
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267:city council of Columbus
131:James Preston Poindexter
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616:Baptists from Virginia
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155:Wilberforce University
611:Baptist abolitionists
342:The Columbus Dispatch
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226:Second Baptist Church
218:Second Baptist Church
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182:, second governor of
296:William Dennison Jr.
198:Louisville, Kentucky
159:Booker T. Washington
147:Underground Railroad
591:Activists from Ohio
371:Xenia Daily Gazette
313:built in Columbus,
288:Rutherford B. Hayes
336:Zachariah, Holly.
315:Poindexter Village
294:and Ohio governor
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249:Poindexter in 1888
235:Frederick Douglass
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202:Doctor of Divinity
176:Richmond, Virginia
151:American Civil War
55:Richmond, Virginia
35:Poindexter in 1887
626:Ohio Free Soilers
220:in Columbus, Ohio
189:Richmond Enquirer
180:George Poindexter
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375:. Retrieved
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284:Asa Bushnell
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259:Philadelphia
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241:Later career
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208:Early career
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139:civil rights
135:abolitionist
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68:(1907-02-07)
576:1907 deaths
571:1817 births
184:Mississippi
565:Categories
377:October 5,
347:2023-02-20
321:References
170:Early life
100:Republican
82:Occupation
47:1819-10-26
307:pneumonia
165:Biography
115:Religion
110:Personal
86:Minister
621:Barbers
119:Baptist
76:, U.S.
57:, U.S.
379:2016
290:and
63:Died
41:Born
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