James
Young (1858-1921)
James Young was probably the most prominent African American
political figure in North Carolina in the 1890s. He was born in Vance
County to an enslaved woman and a prominent white man. His father enabled
him to receive an education in local schools and at Shaw University,
and assisted in his obtaining a government job. Young was active in
Republican politics, and was first named as a delegate to the state
convention in 1880. He held several posts in county and state government
before being elected to the state legislature in 1894.
Young favored cooperation between the Republicans and
Populists and worked to negotiate the first fusion agreement in 1894.
In 1896, Republican Governor Daniel Russell appointed Young to the board
of directors of the state's deaf, dumb, and blind institutions. This
appointment especially rankled white Democrats, who often attacked Young
during the 1898 campaign. The News and Observer ran a cartoon
showing Young inspecting the rooms of white women under state care.
When hostilities between the United States and Spain increased
in the spring of 1898, Governor Russell appointed Young to lead the
Third North Carolina Regiment of African American volunteers. The Third
Regiment was the first in North Carolina to be led by African American
officers. The regiment never left the country, but was a great source
of pride for African Americans throughout the state.
After the war ended in 1899, Young was appointed to a
federal job in the revenue department. He would remain in U.S. government
work until 1913. He died in Raleigh in 1921.
Sources: Helen
G. Edmonds, The Negro and Fusion Politics in North Carolina, 1894-1901.
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1951; Willard
B. Gatewood, "Hunter, James Young." Dictionary of North
Carolina Biography, vol. 6. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina
Pres, 1996; Willard B. Gatewood, "North
Carolina's Negro Regiment in the Spanish-American War." North
Carolina Historical Review 48 no. 4 (October 1971), pp. 370-387.
Image Source:
"The Military and Historical Portrait Group of the Officers of
the Third North Carolina U.S.V. Infantry in the War with Spain." Asheville,
N.C.: Thomas L. Leatherwood, 1899. Detail.
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