Thomas J. ReynoldsThomas John Reynolds (1854-1896) was a lawyer and legislator who served in the South Carolina Senate post Reconstruction. Reynolds was born March 28, 1854 as a slave.[1][2] He was from Saint Helena Island in Beaufort County, South Carolina.[3] Educated first in the local schools of Saint Helena Island then in Atlanta College he then attended the University of South Carolina but it closed in 1877 before he obtained a degree.[1] He was first elected to serve in the South Carolina Senate from 1884 until 1886 representing Beaufort County.[3] He was then elected for a second term in 1886,[4] and served until 1888.[5] He served as a Republican.[4] In 1896 he was an alternate delegate to Republican National Convention representing South Carolina.[5] He was one of the last African Americans to serve in the South Carolina Senate in the post Reconstruction era[6] with blacks being disenfranchised by the 1895 constitution and then a more than a ninety year gap until the election of I. DeQuincey Newman in 1983.[1] He studied to be a lawyer and was admitted to the bar by the South Carolina Supreme Court December 1885.[7] He worked in a law firm with William James Whipper.[3] In 1891 Reynolds was convicted of defrauding pensioners by charging illegal fees and keeping a portion of their monies.[8] He died sometime in 1896.[1] See alsoReferences
|