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Lynch, John Roy (1847-1939)

John Roy Lynch, congressman, soldier, and author was born in Concordia Parish, Louisiana on September 10, 1847 to Patrick Lynch, an Irish immigrant and Catherine White, a slave.  Lynch’s father died soon after his birth.   Lynch and his mother were then traded to a plantation in Natchez, Mississippi.  During the Civil War, Lynch became free when he fled the plantation and to serve as a cook for the 49th Illinois Volunteer Regiment.

During Reconstruction, Lynch joined the Republican Party in Mississippi.  After working as assistant secretary for the Republican State Convention, Lynch became the Justice of the Peace in Natchez County, Mississippi.  In November 1869 at the age of 22, Lynch was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives.   Three years later, in 1872 he was named Speaker of the House.

Later in 1872, Lynch ran for a seat in the United States House of Representatives.   He was elected, winning more than fifty percent of the popular vote.   In Congress Lynch was known primarily for his support of a civil rights measure that eventually became the Civil Rights Act of 1875.   During his congressional campaign in 1874, Lynch voiced concern for racist white Democrats attacks on black Republicans in Mississippi, a prelude to the bloody Mississippi gubernatorial campaign of 1875 where hundreds of black and white Republicans were killed.  Despite those violent tactics which reduced the Republican vote in the state, Lynch managed to be re-elected to Congress in 1874 and 1876.  During his third term, however, he was increasingly isolated from the states other political leaders, virtually all of whom were white Democrats.  Despite intense opposition from Democrats, Lynch was reelected in 1880.  Because the Democrats disputed the election, he fought for over a year (half his term) before Congress finally seated him.  During his remaining year in Congress, he continued to support civil rights legislation.  Lynch was defeated for re-election in 1882 by Natchez judge Henry S. Van Eaton, a Democrat.  He

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