THOMAS MUNDY PETERSON IS THE FIRST EVER BLACK TO CAST A VOTE IN THE POLITICAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.

in #steemiteducation6 years ago

Thomas Mundy Peterson known as the first ever black man to cast a vote in America was born in October 6, 1824 in Metuchen, New Jersey. His father, also named Thomas, worked for the Mundy family. His mom, Lucy Green, was subjugated to Hugh Newell and got her freedom at age 21 by Newell's will.

Thomas Mundy Peterson, a school caretaker from Perth Amboy, New Jersey was the first African American in history to vote in the United States, because of the adoption of the Fifteenth Amendment. Peterson casted his historic vote on March 31, 1870, one day after the approval of the alteration, which gave every citizen of the United States the privilege to vote paying little attention to race, colour, or past subjugation.

He voted in a local election at the Perth Amboy City Hall to change the town's sanction. A few nationals needed the current contract to be changed yet others needed it to be abandoned in favour for a township type of government.

Peterson voted in favour of the current sanction and his side won 230 to 63. Peterson was a school caretaker and general handyman in Perth Amboy. Peterson been a very active member in the Republican Party, this earned him the city's first African-American to hold an elected office, on the Middlesex County Commission. He was additionally the city's first black individual to serve on a jury.

Peterson addressed the person who urged him to vote.

"I was working for Mr. T. L. Kearny on the morning of the day of the election, and did not consider voting until the point that he came out to the stable where I was taking care of the horses and adviced me to go to the surveys and exercise a citizen's benefit," peterson said in a interview .

"As I moved to the polls, one man offered me a ticket bearing the words "revised charter" and another denoted, "no charter." I figured I would not vote to surrender our charter in the wake of holding it so long, so I picked a revised charter ballot."

To honour peterson as the first African-American voter, 70 dollars was raised by citizens of Perth Amboy, New Jersey. They additionally awarded Thomas Mundy Peterson a medallion in 1884. The medallion had the substance of Abraham Lincoln engraved on one side.

While the other side of the medallion reads "presented by nationals of Perth Amboy N.J. to Thomas Peterson the first coloured voter in the U.S. under the arrangements of the fifteenth Amendment at an election held in that city March 13, 1870 amid a Memorial festivity in same 1884.

Peterson passed away in 1904 and was buried at the St. Peters Episcopal Church Cemetery in Perth Amboy, New Jersey. At the point when his grave was discovered a very long time after his demise, it was given a historical marker.

March 31 is viewed as Thomas Mundy Peterson Day in New Jersey in remembrance of his historic vote. In October 1989, the school where Peterson had worked was renamed after him. Presently as of now on State Street, Perth Amboy.

Images source: 1, 2, 3, 4.

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