Edwin Belcher
Edwin Belcher (born c. 1845) was an officer in the Union Army during the American Civil War, a Freedmen Bureau official in Monroe County, Georgia after the war, and then a state senator in the Georgia Legislature representing Wilkes County, Georgia during the Reconstruction Era. Military serviceEdwin Belcher reportedly served in a white regiment and was twice taken prisoner during the Civil War. When his background was discovered he reportedly said he did his duty like any other soldier.[1] Political officeBelcher was also appointed an assessor of revenue for Georgia's third district by U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant and was later appointed by Grant as postmaster in Macon, Georgia.[1] After the 1868 election the legislature refused to seat African Americans. More than two dozen were turned away but Belcher and a few others were allowed to remain because they had light complexions and it could not be proved they were 1/8 or more "Negro".[2] The others allowed to remain in their elected offices were Madison Davis of Clarke County, F. H. Fyall of Macon County and Thomas P. Beard of Richmond County.[3] Law careerIn 1872 he graduated from Howard University's law school (founded in 1869) and was admitted to the bar in Washington D.C.[1] His brother Eugene R. Belcher was also part of one of the earliest Howard University Law School classes.[4][5] In 1878, Belcher wrote a letter introducing himself to William Lloyd Garrison.[6] In the letter he says he was "born the slave of my father". LegacyDrew S. Days III, former Solicitor General of the United States, is a descendant of the Belcher family.[7] References
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