George James Austin Sr. (c. 1881 – August 19, 1930), was an American military officer, educator, and insurance salesman.[1] He was a Black military officer in the United States, who served in the Spanish-American War and World War I. He worked for Black representation in the U.S. military during a time of racial segregation. Austin served on-campus as a military educator at historically Black colleges, including Prairie View College (now Prairie View A&M University), Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University), and St. Paul Normal and Industrial School (now Saint Paul's College).
Early life and education
George James Austin was born in 1881[2] or 1887 in Cincinnati, Ohio, to parents Jane and Robert Austin.[citation needed] His father Robert was one of the earliest Black residents in the city of Cincinnati.[3]
He noted around 1917, that Blacks were prohibited from attending the fourteen officer training camps on the United States.[13] In 1917, Austin corresponded with civil rights activist Joel Elias Spingarn.[14] He wrote general Leonard Wood about a segregated summer camp for college students.[15]
Austin eventually moved to Cincinnati and entered the insurance business.[10] He died on August 19, 1930 at St. Mary's Hospital in Cincinnati.[16]
Posthumously Austin was honored at the Cincinnati Memorial Day Parade in 1938.[17]
Personal life and family
Austin married Mary Louise Dotson in 1906.[18] They had a few children together. Austin's father in-law (and Mary Louise's father) was Alabama politician, Mentor Dotson.[19]