T. McCants Stewart (1853-1923)

January 18, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Albert Broussard

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T. McCants Stewart|

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Teacher, author, clergyman, and civil rights leader, Thomas McCants Stewart was born in Charleston, South Carolina on December 28, 1853,  to George Gilchrist and Anna Morris Stewart.  Young Stewart attended the Avery Normal Institute before enrolling in Howard University in 1869. Although only fifteen when he arrived on Howard’s campus, Stewart, nonetheless, distinguished himself as a student and contributed occasional articles to the Washington, D.C. New National Era, an African American newspaper.

Yet Stewart grew increasingly dissatisfied with the quality of instruction at Howard and became one of the first Black students to enroll in the University of South Carolina at Columbia in 1874. In December 1875, Stewart graduated with Bachelor of Arts and L.L.B. degrees.

After graduation, Stewart married Charlotte Pearl Harris and taught mathematics at the State Agricultural and Mechanical College in Orangeburg between 1877 and 1878. He also joined the law firm of South Carolina Congressman Robert Brown Elliott. In 1877, Stewart became an ordained minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church and three years later was appointed pastor of the Bethel AME Church in New York.

In New York, Stewart emerged as a national civil rights leader, respected attorney, and writer. In 1883, however, he migrated to Liberia to serve as a professor at Liberia College. By 1885 Stewart returned to New York and wrote about his African experience in Liberia: The Americo-African Republic (1886).

Restless, Stewart relocated to Hawaii in 1898. There, he hoped to advance his legal practice. After achieving little success, he moved to London, England in 1905, and in 1911 returned to Liberia, where he was appointed an Associate Justice of the Liberian Supreme Court. His criticism of Liberia’s president resulted in his removal from the court in 1914.

Stewart returned to London, where he hoped to live out the remaining years of his life, but in 1921 he moved to the Virgin Islands, a newly acquired United States territory. Regarded as an elder statesman, Stewart established a legal practice with Christopher Payne, one of the island’s most experienced attorneys. Stewart died in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands on January 7, 1923.

Author Profile

Albert S. Broussard is professor of History at Texas A&M University, where he has taught since 1985. Professor Broussard has published six books, Expectations of Equality: A History of Black Westerners (2012), Black San Francisco: The Struggle for Racial Equality in the West, 1900-1954 (1993), African American Odyssey: The Stewarts, 1853-1963 (1998), American History: The Early Years to 1877, and The American Republic Since 1877, and The American Vision (co-authored with James McPherson, Alan Brinkley, Joyce Appleby, and Donald Ritchie). He is past president of the Oral History Association and a former chair of the Nominating Committee of the Organization of American Historians. He has also served on the nominating committees of the Southern Historical Association, the Oral History Association and the Western History Association. Additionally, Professor Broussard served on the council of the American History Association, Pacific Coast Branch and chair of the W. Turrentine Jackson Book Prize Committee for the Western History Association. In 2006, Broussard served on the Frederick Jackson Turner book prize committee for the Organization of American Historians and has served on the De Santis Book Prize Committee for the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Historians, where he is also a member of the Council. He was the recipient of a distinguished teaching award from Texas A&M University in 1997 and presented the University Distinguished Faculty lecture in 2000. He has served as President of the Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. In the spring of 2005, Broussard was the Langston Hughes Professor of American Studies at the University of Kansas. Broussard also served three terms on the board of directors of Humanities Texas and as a consultant to the Texas Education Agency. He participates regularly in teacher training workshops sponsored by Humanities Texas and school districts throughout the state of Texas. Broussard is currently writing a history of racial activism and civil rights in the American West from World War II to the present.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Broussard, A. (2007, January 18). T. McCants Stewart (1853-1923). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/stewart-t-mccants-1853-1923/

Source of the Author's Information:

Albert S. Broussard, African American Odyssey: The Stewarts, 1853-1963 (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1998); Charles E. Wynes, “T. McCants Stewart: Peripatetic Black South Carolinian,” South Carolina Historical Magazine 80 (October, 1979): 311-317.

Further Reading