George E. Trower

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

George E. Trower (b. 1855 - ????) was a minister and state legislator in Arkansas.[1]

In 1886 the Republican assembly nominated Trower, who was residing in Morrilton, Arkansas, as their candidate for the Arkansas House of Representatives.[2] Trower was the only black republican on the ticket and had little support from the white Republicans in the northern townships, however he won by a narrow margin of 21 votes.[2]

He represented Conway County, Arkansas[3] in the Arkansas House of Representatives in 1887 as a Republican.[1][4]

After winning the election the Democrats started harassing him and discovered that he had been performing marriages for over a year without the correct authority.[2] Trowler immediately gained the proper certificate as a minister of the Gospel but the Democrats requested that the matter was referred to a grand jury.[2]

After returning home from the legislature in April 1887, he was taken off a train at gunpoint by two Plumerville Democrats Benjamin White and Thomas Hervey[5] and reported to have been assassinated.[2][6] These reports turned out not to be true and he had moved to Independence County, Arkansas to pastor at an African Methodist Episcopal church in Batesville.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "African-American Legislators (Nineteenth Century)". Encyclopedia of Arkansas.
  2. ^ a b c d e Barnes, Kenneth C. (1998). Who Killed John Clayton?: Political Violence and the Emergence of the New South, 1861-1893. Duke University Press. pp. 57–59, 202. ISBN 978-0-8223-2072-2.
  3. ^ Hempstead, Fay (1890). A Pictorial History of Arkansas: From Earliest Times to the Year 1890 ... Southern Historical Press. p. 1229. ISBN 978-0-89308-074-7.
  4. ^ "Arkansas List of Representatives". The Southern Standard. 18 September 1886. p. 4. Retrieved 2 May 2022.Open access icon
  5. ^ "Plumerville Conflict of 1886–1892". Encyclopedia of Arkansas.
  6. ^ Beary, Michael Jay (2001). Black Bishop: Edward T. Demby and the Struggle for Racial Equality in the Episcopal Church. University of Illinois Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-252-02618-8.