- John Adams Hyman
Infobox_Congressman
name=John Adams Hyman
date of birth=23 July 1840
place of birth=nearWarrenton, North Carolina
date of death=14 September 1891
place of death=Washington, DC
state=North Carolina
district= 2nd
term=March 4 ,1875 -March 3 ,1877
preceded=Charles R. Thomas
succeeded=Curtis Hooks Brogden
party=Republican
profession=
John Adams Hyman (
23 July 1840 –14 September 1891 ) was a U.S. Congressman fromNorth Carolina from 1875 to 1877.Born a slave near
Warrenton, North Carolina , Hyman was sold to a new master inAlabama in 1861 after it was discovered that he was attempting to educate himself. In twenty-five years as a slave, Hyman was sold at least eight times. [cite news | title=Four in Black: North Carolina's Black Congressmen from 1874 to 1901 | publisher=Journal of Negro History, Vol. 64, No. 3| first=George | last=Reid | date=Summer, 1979]After the
American Civil War and the emancipation of southern slaves, Hyman returned toNorth Carolina in 1865 and engaged in agricultural pursuits.He pursued elementary studies and was a delegate to the State equal rights convention in 1865 and to the State constitutional convention in 1868. Hyman was elected to the
North Carolina Senate , where he served from 1868 to 1874. In 1874, he was elected as a Republican to the44th United States Congress and served for one term (March 4 1875 –March 3 1877 ).After unsuccessfully running for renomination to Congress in 1876, Hyman returned to agricultural pursuits. He was special deputy collector of internal revenue for the fourth district of North Carolina from
July 1 1877 toJune 30 1878 . Hyman moved toWashington, DC after he was accused of misappropriating church funds and faced the disapproval of fellow church members over his operation of a liquor store. He worked for theUnited States Postal Service and for theUnited States Department of Agriculture in Washington, where he died onSeptember 14 1891 . Hyman, who left a wife and four children, is buried in Harmony Cemetery.References
* [http://www.littletonobserver.com/%60%602008/articles%20easy%20read%202008/February%202008/Hyman%20rose%20from%20slavery%20to%20serve%20in%20US%20Congress%20021308.html Littleton Observer: Hyman rose from slavery to serve in U.S. Congress]
* [http://www.ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?sp=Markers&sv=E-101 North Carolina Historical Marker]
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