William Oscar Armstrong (March 10, 1847 – May 22, 1932) was an American politician who was the first black candidate for statewide office in Massachusetts. He previously represented Ward 9 in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and the Boston Common Council.[2]
Armstrong had two sons (William Jr. and Theodore) and three daughters (Martha, May, and Freida). William O. Armstrong Jr. was the principal of the Dunbar School in Fairmont, West Virginia. Frieda Armstrong was the first African-American woman to graduate from Boston University.[12] She married John A. Kenney Sr. and was the mother of John A. Kenney Jr.[3]
^"Rallied for Armstrong". The Boston Globe. October 2, 1891.
^"Nominated a Negro [William O. Armstrong] on a State Prohibition Ticket," The Patriot, page 1, Thursday Morning, September 10, 1891, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania."
^"Armstrong Chosen: Prohibition Candidate for State Auditor, 'Three Cheers for the First Black Man ever Put on a State Ticket,'" Boston Daily Advertiser, page 4, Thursday Morning, September 10, 1891.