Arthur Wergs Mitchell

(1883-1968)
State/Territory: Illinois
Party: Democrat
Position: Representative
Term: 74th-77th Congresses (1935-1943)
Congressman Arthur Mitchell was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1934 after defeating Oscar De Priest for his seat and served from 1935 to 1943 (74th-77th Congresses). Representing Illinois’ 1st Congressional District, Mitchell was the first African American Democrat elected to the House. Initially a Republican, Mitchell changed parties during the early days of Roosevelt’s New Deal. During his four terms, Mitchell was the lone African American member in Congress. A lawyer and businessman, Mitchell began teaching in rural schools in Georgia and Alabama. Later he founded the Armstrong Agricultural School in West Butler, Alabama, and served as president for ten years. A fierce Roosevelt loyalist, Mitchell was highly scrutinized by Black leaders and organizations as not being progressive enough on civil rights. He introduced legislation banning lynching and discrimination. He also filed a lawsuit against the Illinois Central and Rock Island Railroads after being forced into a segregated train car just before it passed into Arkansas. This case was advanced to the U.S. Supreme Court as Mitchell v. the United States, which ruled that the railroad violated the Interstate Commerce Act. In his last congressional act, Mitchell condemned politicians as preferring the Axis powers over giving Negros any rights, comparing the atrocities of the Nazis and Japanese with the lynching of African Americans. Mitchell attended Tuskegee Institute, Columbia, and Harvard before being admitted to Washington D.C. Bar.
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