John Francis Wheaton (1866-1922)

May 03, 2013 
/ Contributed By: Lisa Roy

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John Francis Wheaton

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John Francis Wheaton was a late 19th-century and early 20th-century lawyer and politician. Wheaton ran for elective office in three states and was the first African American to serve in the Minnesota House of Representatives.

John Francis Wheaton was born on May 8, 1866, to Jacob and Emily Wheaton in Hagerstown, Maryland.  He graduated from the high school division of Storer College in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, in 1882. During the decade after his graduation, Wheaton worked as a public school teacher, then attended Dixon Business College in Illinois. He later moved to Washington, D.C., where he worked as a clerk for the United States Congress until 1892.  In 1889, Wheaton married Ella Chambers, and the couple had two sons, Layton J. and Frank P. Wheaton.

Wheaton graduated from Howard’s Law Department in May 1892 and set up a practice in Hagerstown.  He was only the fourth African American to pass the bar and practice law in Maryland and the first outside Baltimore.

In 1893, however, Wheaton moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he worked as a clerk in the state legislature and as a deputy clerk in the Minneapolis municipal courts.  The following year, he became the first African American to graduate from the University of Minnesota Law School.

Wheaton had a lifelong affinity for politics. In 1885, at the age of nineteen, he gave his first political “stump speech.” By twenty-one, he was an unsuccessful candidate for a seat in the Maryland State Legislature. He served as a delegate in 1887, 1889, and 1891 to Maryland’s State Republican Convention and was elected temporary chairman of the 1889 Convention.  At the age of twenty-two, Wheaton attended the 1888 Republican National Convention in Chicago as an alternate.  He was one of the youngest delegates at the convention and among a handful of Black delegates.

After moving to Minneapolis, Wheaton quickly became involved in Minnesota politics.  He was elected to serve as an alternate delegate to the 1896 Republican National Convention in St. Louis. Two years later, on November 8, 1898, Wheaton was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives to represent the 42nd District. While holding his only elective office, Wheaton was instrumental in passing the 1899 civil rights statute that ended discrimination in public accommodations and transportation.  He also lobbied for permitting African American soldiers to fight in the Spanish-American War.

Wheaton again represented Minnesota at the Republican National Convention when it met in Philadelphia in 1900.  He did not win reelection to the legislature in 1900; instead, he practiced law briefly in Minneapolis before moving to Chicago to work for an insurance company.  He relocated again in 1906 to New York City and switched to the Democratic Party. Wheaton practiced law in the city until his death.  He worked for the New York City District Attorney’s office from January to May of 1920. His final foray into politics came in 1919 when he ran unsuccessfully for the New York State Assembly.

John Francis Wheaton died at the age of 56 on January 15, 1922, in his home in Harlem. He was survived by his second wife (Dora), sons (Layton and Frank), and a stepson (Richard Weston).

About the Author

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Dr. Lisa Roy is the newly appointed Executive Director for the Colorado Department of Early Childhood. The Department will manage Colorado’s new universal preschool program, serving 4-year-olds statewide starting in the summer of 2023. The Department will also manage comprehensive programs and services for young children, families and early childhood professionals, utilizing a “one-stop shop” application process.

Dr. Roy previously served as the director of program development for the Buffett Early Childhood Institute and as the executive director of early childhood education for Denver Public Schools. She has volunteered and worked in non-profit and government roles supporting families with young children for over 30 years.

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Boards Dr. Roy has served on include: Emily Griffith Foundation, Denver Early Childhood Council, Afterschool Alliance, KIPP Colorado, Mental Health Center of Denver, Tony Grampsas Youth Crime Prevention and Intervention, and Denver Welfare Reform.
Dr. Roy’s current memberships include: National Association for the Education of Young Children, Colorado Women’s Forum, and Golden Key Society
Dr. Roy was recently honored with the Harmon Award for Early Childhood Mental Health from the Colorado Association for Infant Mental Health.
Dr. Roy has presented several times a year at local (Omaha and Nebraska for the last few years, and Denver and Colorado for more than three decades), as well as National webinars and conferences.
Dr. Roy writes for pleasure as a literary nonfiction and historical writer primarily. Dr. Roy’s writings include:
Prairie Pioneer, Essay Daily – January 31, 2022
Submit, Ouch, Revise, Resubmit, Brevity Blog – December 30, 2021
Summer of ’68: Crab Feast, The Linden Review – December 7, 2021
Various articles with Blackpast.org, Blackpast.org – January 12, 2020
Salsa Soul and Spirit Book Review, Taylor and Francis Online – January 29, 2015

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Roy, L. (2013, May 03). John Francis Wheaton (1866-1922). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/wheaton-john-francis-1866-1922/

Source of the Author's Information:

“It’s a Fact! (John Francis Wheaton),” Session Weekly, (St. Paul: Minnesota House of Representatives Information Office, February 21, 1992), 14; Marion Daniel Shutter, “John Francis Wheaton,” Progressive Men of Minnesota, Marion D. Shutter, D.D. and J.S. McLain, M.A. eds., (Minneapolis: The Minneapolis Journal, 1897), 350-351.

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