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  • 2019-01-04 (xsd:date)
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  • Did Theodore Roosevelt 'Punish' a Mississippi City for Forcing Out a Black Postmaster? (en)
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  • On 2 January 2019 a history-themed Facebook page marked the anniversary of a display of resolve from President Theodore Roosevelt in 1903 against a Mississippi town that forced its own postmaster to resign after being incited to do so by a series of racist newspaper columns. The post on that subject by History Hustle stated that: Minnie Cox was originally appointed postmaster for Indianola, Mississippi, in 1891 by President Benjamin Harrison. While Roosevelt eventually came to her defense, the National Postal Museum's account of her tenure suggests that it was one of Roosevelt's own policy positions that spurred the unrest against her: Tensions were further inflamed by James K. Vardaman, editor of the nearby Greenwood Commonwealth newspaper and an unabashed white supremacist. Speeches and opinion pieces attributed to Vardaman in 1902 are quoted as saying that Indianola was wrong for tolerating a negro wench as a postmaster. Vardaman also wrote that If it is necessary, every Negro in the state will be lynched; it will be done to maintain white supremacy, although it is unclear whether Vardaman was specifically targeting Cox. According to an article published in The Journal of Negro History, a meeting of almost a hundred white residents of Indianola led to the holding of a vote to order Cox to resign her post by 1 January 1903. Cox refused to leave her position, but did say that she would not be a candidate for reappointment at the conclusion of her term in 1904. Writing for the Journal, Willard B. Gatewood reported that prior to the meeting of white residents, a petition calling on Cox to resign had already been distributed: Roosevelt reportedly received Cox's resignation notice on 5 December 1902. Instead of accepting it, however, the president ordered that the Indiananola post office's operations be suspended, with service resuming on the condition that Cox be allowed to continue her duties. Roosevelt also ensured her salary continued to be paid after the office was closed. In the meanwhile, Indiananola's mail was rerouted to Greenville, and the Roosevelt administration ordered Attorney General Philander Chase Knox to prosecute anyone who had threatened Cox, although it is unclear whether many cases were actually opened before the latter initiative was ignored. On 5 January 1903, Cox left Indianola, with residents reportedly saying that if she returned to the town she would get her neck broken inside of two hours. The post office was reopened the following year under the direction of a new white postmaster, William Martin. Seizing on the furor surrounding both Cox's appointment and Roosevelt's actions in her defense, James Vardaman mounted a successful gubernatorial campaign in Mississippi in 1903. He held that office from 1904 to 1908, and he also served in the U.S. Senate from 1913 to 1919. In July 2017, the University of Mississippi moved to remove his name from a campus building after an internal report described him as distinctly unworthy of honor. Contrary to the claim made in History Hustle's graphic, Cox did not return to her position as postmaster, although according to Politico she and her husband eventually moved back to Indianola and opened the Delta Penny Savings Bank -- one of the first banks in the state to be owned by African-Americans. Cox died in 1933. On 14 July 2008, the Indianola post office was renamed in her honor with the passage of House Bill 4010. (en)
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