Parker Robbins, from "free black" to Union Soldier and Republican Legislator and Skilled Mechanic
Grand Old Partisan celebrates more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. Today, I salute Parker Robbins, born in North Carolina, July 5th 1834. His parents being Chowanoke Indian and African-American, the state considered him a free black. He owned a 102-acre farm. During the Civil War, Robbins fled to Union-controlled Norfolk and enlisted to fight against the Confederacy. He rose to sergeant-major with the 2nd U.S. (Colored) Cavalry. Peace restored, Robbins became a fervent Republican. He won two terms in the state house and was delegate to the 1868 constitutional convention. He signed an Address to the Colored People of North Carolina that denounced Democrat depravities. President Ulysses Grant appointed Robbins local postmaster. Later years, the skilled mechanic invented machines for planting cotton and sharpening saw blades. He constructed a steam boat as well as many houses. Back to Basics for the Republican Party is my civi...