Joseph Corbin, early African-American Republican educator and statesman
Grand Old Partisan celebrates more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. Today, I honor Joseph Corbin, born near Columbus, March 26th 1833. His parents had been slaves in Virginia. He studied at Ohio University, worked at a bank, learned several languages, taught school and wrote articles for mathematical journals. This multi-talented scholar also published a newspaper, The Colored Citizen. In 1872, Corbin moved to Little Rock to report for another newspaper, The Arkansas Republican . That year, the GOP nominated him, successfully, for superintendent of public instruction. At end of his term, he founded an institution of higher learning for African-Americans, now the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. President Ulysses Grant appointed him chief clerk at the Little Rock post office. Back to Basics for the Republican Party is my civil rights history of the GOP. To quote the book: "The more we Republicans know about the histo...