Thomas Cardozo

Thomas Whitmarsh Cardozo (December 19, 1838[1] – April 12, 1881[2]) was an educator, journalist, and public official during the Reconstruction Era in the United States.[3][1] He served as State Superintendent of Education in Mississippi and is the first African American to have held the position.[4]

Thomas Cardozo
Mississippi Superintendent of Education
Personal details
Born(1838-12-19)December 19, 1838
Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.
DiedApril 12, 1881(1881-04-12) (aged 42)
Newton, Massachusetts
NationalityAmerican
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Laura J. Williams
RelativesFrancis Lewis Cardozo (brother)
Henry Cardozo (brother)
Benjamin N. Cardozo
(distant relative)
Professionpolitician, educator, journalist, postal worker

Early life

Lydia Weston, mother
Isaac Cardozo, father

Thomas Cardozo was born free in Charleston, South Carolina in 1838. His father, Isaac Nunez Cardozo, was part of a well-known Jewish family and was a weigher in the U.S. Customs House of Charleston for 24 years, until his death in 1855.[5] Thomas's mother was Lydia Weston,[note 1] a freed slave[note 2] of mixed ancestry. He had two older brothers, Henry Cardozo and Francis Lewis Cardozo, and at least one older sister, Eslanda.[8][1] [note 3]

In Charleston, Thomas was among the "free-Negro elite" and went to private schools for free black children, mainly taught by free black teachers.[10][11] He was also taught by his father Isaac and his uncle Jacob Cardozo,[11] who was an economist and newspaper publisher.[12]

The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 and the secession movement caused free people of color to be concerned about being enslaved.[9] When Isaac Cardozo died during this worsening time, Thomas's family lost their protector. Thomas was 17 at the time and became an apprentice in a company that manufactured rice-threshing machines.[10][13]

In 1857, two years after his father's death, Thomas's mother moved to Ohio and he moved to New York where he continued his education. At the Newburgh Collegiate Institute, he took academic courses and trained to be a teacher. Before he could graduate, civil war broke out and he began teaching in 1861.[13][10] He married Laura J. Williams, a teacher and accomplished musician who was from a mixed-race family in Brooklyn. Thomas and Laura became parents with a son born in 1863 and another in 1865.[14]

Career in education

Shortly after the beginning of the American Civil War, Cardozo began teaching in New York. A few years later in April 1865 at the end of the war, Thomas and his family moved from Flushing, New York back to his home town of Charleston, South Carolina. There he supervised educational efforts for the American Missionary Association (AMA).[10]

In the challenging turmoil of the weeks following the end of the Civil War, he supervised the AMA's educational activities in Charleston. He obtained building space and books. He supervised teachers, hired new teachers, and ran the AMA house for teachers who came down from the north. All this was in the context of disputes between the various aid agencies there.[10] Thomas was the first AMA school principal in Charleston at the Tappan School.[15]

This path towards success ended when the AMA became aware of a previous affair that the married Thomas Cardozo had with a female student of his in New York. Also, the AMA was dissatisfied with his accounting of his expenditures back then and suspected that some of the expenditures went to the young woman. The AMA asked his brother Francis to discuss this with him in Charleston. Francis reported back that Thomas had the affair through "weakness", had “not been deliberately wicked”, and didn't misappropriate any AMA funds. Thomas asked for forgiveness. The AMA replaced Thomas with his brother Francis Cardozo around September 1865.[16][17]

Thomas stayed in Charleston and became a grocer for a few months until his store burnt down. He moved to Baltimore, Maryland where he and his wife taught at the Negro Industrial School for a short time. When the school lost its funding in 1866, he and his family moved to Syracuse, New York. They returned to the South in 1869 where he and his wife opened a normal school in Elizabeth City, North Carolina the following year.[18][19]

Career in politics

"Whenever I sit to sketch the various members of the Legislature it kindles within me a warm feeling for the many good qualities and earnest friendship of all of them."

Civis           (March 24, 1873)

In 1871, Thomas Cardozo and his family moved to Vicksburg, Mississippi where his wife wanted to live because she had relatives there. He thought there would be good opportunities for teaching and later politics.[20] Previously in New York, he had written in the National Anti-Slavery Standard about the place for blacks in the evolving political situation of reconstruction.[21]

Because of the demographics of Mississippi, public office for Cardozo was a good possibility after satisfying the six-month residency requirement.[20] He joined the Republican Party,[22] was elected circuit court clerk of Warren County and took office on January 1, 1872.[23] He wrote accounts of his experiences in Mississippi, including descriptions of his fellow Republican politicians, for the New National Era under the pseudonym "Civis".[22] [note 4] He was a delegate to the 1873 National Civil Rights Convention in Washington, D.C.[24]

In November 1873, Cardozo was elected State Superintendent of Education in Mississippi, along with the election of Governor Adelbert Ames, Lieutenant Governor Alexander K. Davis and Secretary of State James Hill.[25][26] Cardozo proposed uniform textbooks for Mississippi schools during his tenure.[27][28] Although he was the first African-American to hold the post, Cardozo did not challenge the de facto racial segregation that existed in Mississippi schools.[28] [note 5]

In November 1874, he was indicted for embezzling. The jury in the trial could not reach a verdict. There followed ongoing political attacks by conservatives that turned into violence. On July 4, 1875 in Vicksburg, a white mob attacked a meeting where Cardozo was to speak, followed by street violence where several blacks were killed or injured. City officials helped Cardozo, the main target of the attacks, escape from the city.[30]

The occupying Union Army began to withdraw from the South in 1875 in the last years of the Reconstruction era. Conservative white Democrats had regained control of the Mississippi state legislature by a program of violence and intimidation against Republican black voters. The legislators brought impeachment charges against Cardozo. In 1876 he agreed to resign.[31] He is considered to have "capitalized on party weaknesses and eventually brought opprobrium on himself and his party."[32]

Leaving the politics, a pending trial, and the physically threatening situation of Mississippi in 1876, Cardozo moved to Newton, Massachusetts. There he worked for the postal service until his death in 1881. He was forty-two.[31] Thomas Cardozo Middle School in Jackson, Mississippi is named for him and opened in 2010.[4] [note 6]

Notes

  1. Although some authors refer to Thomas Cardozo's mother as Lydia Williams, official records for 1855 and 1857 indicate that her name was Lydia Weston. Her deceased former owner was Plowden Weston.[6]
  2. The will of her deceased former owner, Plowden Weston, effectively freed her in 1826, but didn't legally free her.[7]
  3. It's unclear whether there were other siblings. For example, one source said there was also a sister Lydia and a brother Jacob.[9]
  4. See Further reading for some of Civis's writings.
  5. Cardozo advocated for school desegregation in the federal Civil-Rights Bill under the pseudonym Civis in the New National Era.[29]
  6. Mississippi Legislature 2009 Regular Session, House Resolution 14 — "A Resolution Congratulating the Family of Superintendent Thomas W. Cardozo, on the Dedication of a Middle School Named in His Honor by the Jackson Public Schools."       See also Mississippi Legislative Bill Status System > 2009 Regular Session > Select a Measure > Measure number: HR 14 > House Resolution 14 .

References

  1. Brock, Euline W. (1981). "Thomas W. Cardozo: Fallible Black Reconstruction Leader" (PDF). The Journal of Southern History. 47 (2): 183–206. (p. 186)
  2. Sage, Robert (November 8, 2016). "Thomas W. Cardozo". Find a Grave. Retrieved June 4, 2020.
  3. Richter, William L. (December 1, 2011). "Historical Dictionary of the Civil War and Reconstruction". Scarecrow Press via Google Books.
  4. "Cardozo Middle School — About Cardozo". Jackson Public Schools. August 8, 2016. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  5. Fick, Sarah; et al. "Cardozo Family — A family whose descendants shaped history". Mapping Jewish Charleston. College of Charleston. Archived from the original on June 6, 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  6. Kinghan, Neil (2019). A Brief Moment in the Sun: Francis Cardozo and Reconstruction in South Carolina (PDF) (PhD). University College London. pp. 65–67
  7. Kinghan 2019, pp. 61–62, 66–67
  8. Kinghan 2019, p. 67
  9. Waldfogel, Sabrah (August 1, 2014). "Jews and Slavery: Isaac Cardozo and Lydia Weston". Jewish Book Council. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  10. Brock 1981, p. 188
  11. Kinghan 2019, p. 69
  12. Brock 1981, p. 186, footnote 10
  13. "Hon. T. W. Cardozo". New National Era and Citizen. 4 (37). September 18, 1873. p. 3. (Image 3) Column 1. Reprinted from Jackson Mississippi Pilot.
  14. Brock 1981, p. 188, main text and footnote 15.
  15. Kinghan 2019, p. 114
  16. Brock 1981, p. 189
  17. Kinghan 2019, p. 115
  18. Brock 1981, pp. 189–190
  19. "Thomas W. Cardozo Unsung Schoolmaster and Politician" (PDF). ecsu.edu. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  20. Brock 1981, pp. 191–192
  21. Brock 1981, p. 190
  22. Brock 1981, p. 192
  23. Brock 1981, p. 193
  24. Brock 1981, p. 195
  25. W.E.B. Du Bois (1935). "XI. The Black Proletariat in Mississippi and Louisiana". Black Reconstruction in America (1860-1880). Meridian. p. 444–5.
  26. Biennial Reports of the Departments and Benevolent Institutions, of the State Of Mississippi for the Years 1896–97 (Report). 1898. p. 95. Retrieved June 13, 2020.
  27. "Cardozo Middle School". Jackson Public Schools. August 17, 2016.
  28. Brock 1981, p. 197
  29. New National Era July 2, 1874.
  30. Brock 1981, pp. 200–201
  31. Brock 1981, p. 204
  32. Brock 1981, p. 185

Further reading

          - by Thomas Cardozo under the pseudonym Civis,
               1871: Oct 26, Nov 23, Dec 21
               1872: Jan 18, Feb 8, Apr 4, Nov 21, Dec 26
               1873: Feb 20, Mar 13, Apr 3, Apr 17, May 29, Jun 19, Jul 3, Aug 21, Sep 11, Oct 23, Oct 30, Dec 11
               1874: Feb 19, Jul 2

          - by Cardozo under his own name — Aug 3, 1871
          - by others about Cardozo/Civis — Dufoy, Jan 16, 1873 [lower-alpha 1];   H. C. Carter, Nov 20, 1873 [lower-alpha 2];  Robert C. MacGregor, Jul 16, 1874 [lower-alpha 3];
                                                                  May 8, 1873 (near bottom of column 6)
          - a reprint from the Mississippi Pilot about Cardozo — Sep 18, 1873

      ____________________________

  1. Dufoy discussed some of Civis's comments from the Dec 26, 1872 issue.
  2. Carter criticized Civis's comments from the Oct 30, 1873 issue. Civis responded in the Dec 11, 1873 issue.
  3. MacGregor criticized Civis's comments from the Jul 2, 1874 issue, asked if Civis was T. W. Cardoza [sic], and said he should respond to various accusations from the press. Civis didn't write any more for the New National Era after this. (Thomas W. Cardozo: Fallible Black Reconstruction Leader    See p. 198: main text and footnote 62.)


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