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James Monroe Trotter

James Monroe Trotter - engraving.jpg
Engraving of James Monroe Trotter
Trotter James Monroe Cornell.jpg
Lt. James Monroe Trotter
Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library
Trotter-Bessie-Virginia-as-a-girl.jpg
James Monroe Trotter's youngest daugher, Bessie, mother of Virginia Craft Rose
James Monroe Trotter - engraving.jpg
Trotter James Monroe Cornell.jpg
Trotter-Bessie-Virginia-as-a-girl.jpg

Dates: 1842–1892

Family: Fossett (Hemings)

Occupation: Post Office, Recorder of Deeds

Born in slavery in Mississippi, James Monroe Trotter was educated in Ohio and became a schoolteacher. In June 1863 he and his friend William H. Dupree traveled to Boston to enlist in the 55th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. Both were commissioned second lieutenants in 1864 but had to wait a year for official recognition. Trotter was one of most prominent spokesmen in the dispute over equal pay for African American soldiers.

After the war, Trotter and Dupree returned to Ohio, married sisters Virginia and Maria Elizabeth Isaacs, and moved to Boston where they obtained good positions in the U.S. Postal Service. In 1878 Trotter published a groundbreaking survey of African American music. His distinguished war record and support of the Democratic Party led to appointment as District of Columbia Recorder of Deeds in 1887, the highest government office open to blacks. Trotter’s passionate commitment to equality inspired his famous son, William Monroe Trotter.

Excerpts

(video)
"Make a difference"

Peggy Preacely describes her involvement in the civil rights movement, in the tradition of her Trotter and Craft ancestors.

Theme: Struggle for Equality

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Related People

  • Virginia Isaacs Trotter  wife
  • William Monroe Trotter  son
  • Virginia Craft Rose  granddaughter
  • Margaret Dammond Preacely great-granddaughter
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