Ezekiel Gillespie (1818-1892)
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Ezekiel Gillespie was a Wisconsin activist, family, and religious man. His attempt to vote resulted in challenging voting discrimination and opening up suffrage for all Black men in Wisconsin.
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Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
Born in 1816, Ezekiel Gillespie is most well known for his role in securing the right to vote for Black men. Per an 1849 referendum, Black men had been granted the right to vote, however, election inspectors continued to prevent Black men from casting their ballots. In 1865 Gillespie attempted to vote in the gubernatorial election but was refused. Partnering with Sherman Booth, a well known abolitionist and newspaper editor, and Byron Paine, a future WI Supreme Court Justice, Gillespie filed a case against several members of the Milwaukee board of election inspectors. Losing in Milwaukee County, the group appealed in 1866 in the Wisconsin Supreme Court where a unanimous decision granted voting rights to all black men. This marked a pivotal moment in Wisconsin history because it would not be until 1870 with the passing of the Fifteenth Amendment that all black men nationwide would be granted suffrage.
Outside of civil rights activities, Gillespie was also known to be a dedicated family and religious man. In 1868 Gillespie, along with several other families, worked towards founding the First African Methodist Episcopal Church. This was the first African Methodist Episcopal church in Milwaukee and Wisconsin which continues to serve members presently under the name St. Mark’s AME Church.
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This entry is part of an ongoing collaboration between America's Black Holocaust Museum and Forest Home Cemetery & Arboretum. This entry was written by Adamali De La Cruz.
Sources
Holzhueter, John O. Wisconsin Magazine of History: Volume 60, Number 3, Spring, 1977. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Accessed December 13, 2024. https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/wmh/id/34085
“Ezekiel Gillespie.” Dignitaries. Forest Home Cemetery. August 23, 2022. https://foresthomecemetery.com/dignitaries/ezekiel-gillespie/.
S., Heather. “Ezekiel Gillespie: Pioneer for African American Voting Rights in Wisconsin· MPL.” Milwaukee Public Library. February 20, 2015. https://www.mpl.org/blog/now/ezekiel-gillespie-pioneer-for-african-american-voting-rights-in-wisconsin
“Gillespie v. Palmer and others 28 Wis. 544 (1866),” Archived by Wisconsin Courts. Accessed December 13, 2024. https://www.wicourts.gov/courts/supreme/docs/famouscases06.pdf
“Gillespie, Ezekiel (1818-1892) | Wisconsin Historical Society.” Wisconsin Historical Society. August 3, 2012. https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/Records/Article/CS1724.
https://foresthomecemetery.com/dignitaries/ezekiel-gillespie/
https://www.mpl.org/blog/now/ezekiel-gillespie-pioneer-for-african-american-voting-rights-in-wisconsin