Clinton Wesley Battle was a state legislator and public official in North Carolina during and after the Reconstruction era. He represented Edgecombe County in the North Carolina House of Representatives in 1879[1] and 1881.

Enslaved at birth, Battle was born in Edgecombe County.[2] He also served as a postmaster in Battleboro in Nash County.[3][4][5] He served as a trustee of Swift Creek Township and then served two years as a county commissioner before being elected to the North Carolina House of Representatives. He married and had at least one child.[6]

He and W. W. Watson, both "colored", were Republican nominees for North Carolina House seats[7] and served together in 1881.

See also

References

  1. Carolina, North (December 9, 1879). "Laws and Resolutions of the State of North Carolina" via Google Books.
  2. https://rockymountnc.gov/RockyMountNC/Documents/CityClerk/CouncilMeetings/2021/Minutes/2021-06-28%20-%20Minutes.pdf
  3. Commission, United States Civil Service (December 9, 1899). "Official Register of the United States". U.S. Government Printing Office via Google Books.
  4. Justesen, Benjamin R. (2005). "Black Tip, White Iceberg: Black Postmasters and the Rise of White Supremacy in North Carolina, 1897-1901". The North Carolina Historical Review. 82 (2): 193–227. JSTOR 23523507 via JSTOR.
  5. "The North Carolina Historical Review". North Carolina Historical Commission. December 9, 2005 via Google Books.
  6. Tomlinson, John S. (December 9, 1879). "Tar heel sketch-book. A brief biographical sketch of the life and public acts of the members of the General assembly of North Carolina. Session of 1879". Raleigh, [N.C.] Raleigh news steam book and job print via Internet Archive.
  7. Turner, Joseph Kelly; Bridgers, John Luther (1920). "History of Edgecombe County, North Carolina".


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