The 79-Year Silence — Florida

The 79-Year Silence

Black Political Power in Florida, 1868 – Present

Where Black political power grew strongest after Reconstruction ended — and was erased anyway.

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Florida breaks the pattern. In every other Southern state, Black officeholding peaked during Reconstruction and declined after 1877. In Florida, historian Canter Brown Jr. documented that more Black officials were elected or appointed after Reconstruction ended than during it. The exclusion, when it came, destroyed a political tradition that had been growing, not fading.

Jonathan Gibbs, a Presbyterian minister educated at Dartmouth and Princeton Theological Seminary, served as Secretary of State and then Superintendent of Public Instruction — the highest-ranking Black state official in Florida. He built the state’s public education system. He died suddenly in 1874, under circumstances many contemporaries believed were poisoning.

Reconstruction and Beyond · 1868–1880s
Jonathan Gibbs
Secretary of State, 1868–1872 · Supt. of Public Instruction, 1872–1874
Josiah T. Walls
U.S. Representative, 1871–1876 · State Senator · First Black FL congressman
Robert Meacham
State Senator, Jefferson County, 1868–1877, 1879 · Circuit Court Clerk · Postmaster
Charles H. Pearce
State Senator, Leon County, 1870–1874 · AME Minister · Constitutional Convention delegate
Harry Cruse
State Senator, 6th District, 1869–1870 · Also State Representative
William U. Saunders
State Senator, Nassau County
Oliver J. Coleman
State Senator, 10th District, 1874 · Also State Representative and county commissioner
Emanuel Fortune
State Representative, Jackson County · Father of T. Thomas Fortune, founder of the New York Age
Henry Harmon
State Representative, Hernando County
John Wallace
State Representative, Leon County
Frederick Hill
State Representative, Gadsden County, 1871 · Constitutional Convention delegate
Josiah Haynes Armstrong
State Representative, 1871–1872, 1875
Washington Pope
State Representative, 3rd District, 1873–1876 · Also county commissioner
Alfred Brown Osgood
State Representative, 10th District, 1875–1876
T. V. Gibbs
State Senator, Duval County, 1881 · Son of Jonathan Gibbs
Joseph E. Lee
State Senator, Duval County, 1881 · Also State Representative and postmaster
Daniel C. Martin
State Senator, Alachua County, 1885 & 1887
and dozens more through the 1880s

Historian Canter Brown Jr. documented nearly 1,000 Black officeholders in Florida between 1867 and 1924 — county commissioners, justices of the peace, postmasters, school superintendents, city council members, and clerks of court. Many served well after Reconstruction ended. The last members of a racially integrated town council left office in 1924.

Source: Canter Brown Jr., Florida’s Black Public Officials, 1867–1924 (University of Alabama Press, 1998)

The Silence · 1889–1968

Florida’s 1885 Constitution and the poll tax, literacy tests, and grandfather clauses that followed completed the erasure. Emanuel Fortune, the state representative from Jackson County, was driven from his home by Klan violence — his son, T. Thomas Fortune, went on to become one of the most influential Black journalists of the 19th century, founding the New York Age. The father served in the legislature. The son had to leave the state to survive.

1890
1900
1910
1920
In Florida, Black political power was still growing when it was destroyed. The silence that followed lasted seventy-nine years. Jonathan Gibbs built the public school system. His successors were not allowed to vote in it.
1930
1940
1950
1960
Restoration · 1968–Present
1968
Joe Lang Kershaw
State Representative · First since Reconstruction
1970
Gwen Cherry
State Representative · First Black woman
1980
Carrie Meek
State Senator · First Black FL Senator since Reconstruction
1982
Arnett E. Girardeau
State Senator · First Black man in FL Senate since Reconstruction
1993
Carrie Meek
U.S. Representative · Granddaughter of enslaved person
Corrine Brown
U.S. Representative · 1993–2017
Alcee Hastings
U.S. Representative · 1993–2021
2026
79
Years of
Silence
1
Man Built the
School System
0
Black Officials
1885–1968

Jonathan Gibbs built Florida’s public schools. For 79 years after, Black Floridians were not allowed to govern them.

The schools, churches, and settlements that Black Floridians built during the silence are the living evidence of what persists when political power is taken away. Help us document them.

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Understanding who held power where your ancestors lived is itself an act of advocacy. From Reconstruction to redistricting.

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Heritage Map

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Every church, school, lodge hall, and cemetery that Black communities built during the silence is a monument to persistence without representation.

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Sources & Further Reading
  • Canter Brown Jr.,
  • U.S. House of Representatives — History, Art & Archives (history.house.gov)
  • Eric Foner, Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution, 1863–1877 (Harper Perennial, 2014)
  • BlackPast.org