Francis E. Dumas

Francis Ernest Dumas (1837 – March 26, 1901) was a wealthy plantation owner and slaveholder of Louisiana. He was of African American and creole heritage and served as an officer in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

Biography

Francis E. Dumas, born in 1837, was the son of plantation owner Joseph Dumas and was an octoroon from his mothers side. He spoke five languages and had lived in France for some time, inheriting the sugar plantation upon his return. There was no simple way for him to free his slaves under Louisiana state law.[1]

When the civil war began Dumas freed over 100 of his slaves and enlisted them as a company in the Union Army. He accordingly was commissioned as Captain of Company B of the 1st Louisiana Native Guards and received a promotion to Major in the 2nd Louisiana Native Guards, one the highest ranks achieved by an African American during the war.[2] He saw combat in the western theater and resigned his commission over disputes on July 3, 1863.

He was a candidate for Lieutenant Governor in 1868 on the James G. Taliaferro ticket backed by publisher Louis Charles Roudanez.[3] He turned down a nomination to be Louisiana's Republican Party nominee for Lieutenant Governor after losing the nomination for governor to Henry C. Warmoth by a few votes on the second ballot after leading the first. Dumas was chosen as minister to Liberia in 1869 but turned it down.[4]

References

  1. Hall, Joan Wylie (28 August 2013). "Conversations with Natasha Trethewey". Univ. Press of Mississippi via Google Books.
  2. Weaver, Clare P. (1 March 2000). "Thank God My Regiment an African One: The Civil War Diary of Colonel Nathan W. Daniels". LSU Press via Google Books.
  3. My Passage at the New Orleans Tribune Jean-Charles Houzeau
  4. Kremer, Gary R. (25 February 1991). "James Milton Turner and the Promise of America: The Public Life of a Post-Civil War Black Leader". University of Missouri Press via Google Books.
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