In this fascinating biography, Dennis S. Nordin chronicles the
life of Arthur Wergs Mitchell, the first black Democrat to be
elected to Congress. Although he is now one of history's
forgotten figures, Mitchell was once almost as well known among
black college students as Jesse Owens and Joe Louis. Nordin,
however, shows that Mitchell's achievements and thus his fame
were the direct result of his dishonorable deeds.
Mitchell's life began humbly in rural Alabama in 1883. After a
memorable boyhood, he studied briefly at Tuskegee Institute,
which had a major effect on Mitchell's outlook. He went on to
study law in Washington, D.C., and thereafter became involved in
politics when the Republicans sent him to Chicago in 1928 to
campaign for Herbert Hoover. Impressed by Chicago's ward system
and patronage politics, he returned to the city and made a bid
for a congressional seat, changing political parties in an effort
to oust black Republican Congressman Oscar DePriest. To
accomplish this, Mitchell resorted to "Uncle Tomming,"
ingratiating himself with the white bosses of the Chicago
Machine.
Within five years a Machine nomination was in hand, and Mitchell
found himself owing his political success and thus his loyalty to
the Chicago Machine. Because he was under strict orders from
Chicago Mayor Ed Kelly not to cause problems or be
confrontational, Mitchell rarely, if ever, supported the
interests of his constituents.
It was only in the later years of his political career that
Mitchell began to show opposition to his Machine backing. He had
been an opponent of the NAACP in his first years in Congress, but
later became a strong supporter of an NAACP antilynching bill. In
1937, Mitchell sued three railroad companies for not offering
equal treatment and accommodations for all passengers. The case
went to the Supreme Court, which gave Mitchell a favorable
ruling. As a result of these "confrontational" acts, the Chicago
Machine quickly decided not to endorse Mitchell in the elections
of 1942.
In his research, Nordin relies on such primary sources as
manuscripts, newspapers, and court records, as well as
information from interviews with Mitchell's friends, neighbors,
colleagues, political rivals, and widow. Woven tightly together,
these sources form a narrative that reveals a most complex and
intriguing individual, a man whose political and moral views and
acts were strongly linked to the goals of the great Chicago
political Machine.
About the Author
Dennis S. Nordin, a resident of Sweden, is the author of Rich
Harvest: A History of the Grange, 1867-1900.