Jesse Chisholm Duke (March 7, 1853 – January 23, 1916) was a religious and political leader in Alabama who established and edited the Baptist Montgomery Herald newspaper and served as a Selma University trustee.[1] He advocated for civil rights for African Americans.[2]
Biography
Duke was born into slavery in March 1853 and raised on a plantation near Cahaba, Alabama. At the age of 10 he was hired as a servant to a family of French refugees. The eldest daughter taught school, giving Jesse his first education.[3] In the 1870s he owned a grocery store and was a teacher.[4] He established the Herald in the 1880s.[5] Duke was an influential political leader among Republicans.[6]
He wrote an anti-lynching article that called out white journalists for turning a blind to the children fathered by white men and African American women, drawing a strong reaction that instigated Duke fleeing with his family to Pine Bluff, Arkansas where he started another newspaper.[7] Local whites held a public meeting and condemned him as a vile and dangerous character after he published a statement about the growing appreciation a white "Juliet" could have for a "colored Romeo".[6]
Duke condemned biased all-white juries and the convict labor system it supplied.[8] He corresponded with Booker T. Washington about relocating the Lincoln School in Marion to Montgomery.[9]