William Crum, venerable African-American Doctor appointed by Theodore Roosevelt and hated by Democrats
Grand Old Partisan celebrates more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. Today, I honor William Crum, born in South Carolina, February 9th 1859. His father was a German immigrant and his mother, a free black. He studied medicine at Howard University in Washington DC and went on to specialize in treating infectious diseases. Twelve years, Dr. Crum chaired his county GOP. He was delegate for the 1900 Republican National Convention. Theodore Roosevelt appointed him collector of customs at Charleston. Democrats filibustered against the nomination, because this would have placed him in authority over white people. Page 142 of Back to Basics for the Republican Party explains that they relented after the persistent President nominated him a fifth time. President William Howard Taft later named Dr. Crum the Ambassador to Liberia. There, he helped its government determine borders and resolve a financial crisis. Back to Basics for the Republican Party is my ...