Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Ezekiel Gillespie

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Name
  
Ezekiel Gillespie


Died
  
March 31, 1892

Ezekiel Gillespie httpsmilwaukeehistoryblogfileswordpresscom2

Milwaukee s ezekiel gillespie park a drone s view


Ezekiel Gillespie (1818 - March 31, 1892) was an African-American civil rights and community leader who won a landmark case securing voting rights in Wisconsin.

Ezekiel Gillespie Ezekiel Gillespie Young MKE Memoirs

Gillespie was born a slave in Greene County, Tennessee, probably the son of an African-American slave and her white slave owner. As a young man he purchased his own freedom for $800. He traveled to Indiana, and soon moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he sold groceries and then worked as a railroad porter. He quickly became a leader in the African-American community. He operated a local branch of the Underground Railroad, pushed Richard Allen (bishop) to open Wisconsin first African-American church, and also played a role in the Joshua Glover controversy.

Ezekiel Gillespie Ezekiel Gillespie MKE Memoirs

In 1865, at the insistence of Sherman Booth, Gillespie attempted to vote. He was denied a ballot, so he sued the Board of Elections. Gillespie v. Palmer went all the way to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. The justices of the court sided with Gillespie, in his argument that Wisconsin voters had voted in favor of male African American suffrage in an 1849 referendum.

Gillespie later moved to Chicago, Illinois, where he died on March 31, 1892. His remains were brought back to Milwaukee to be buried in Forest Home Cemetery alongside some of Milwaukee's most famous residents.

References

Ezekiel Gillespie Wikipedia