by Camille Lewis
Why Minnesota? Out of all the states in the Union, why did thousands of African Americans migrate to the frigid climate of the Midwest?
Stories in Time – a Look into the Ordinary Life of Extraordinary People is a quarterly series that discovers the who and the why by peeking into the lives of African Americans who made the Midwest—specifically Minnesota—their home.
Seventy-seven years before, Minneapolis Spokesman and St. Paul Recorder newspapers sold on street corners, barber shops and beauty salons.—a full century before BlackTwinCities.com veered through cyber space, Joseph C. Reid, an Alabama native, made Minnesota home in 1895. He became one of an elite group of black patrolmen in Minneapolis, well respected by the families and businesses along his beat. After five years of service protecting prominent white citizens of Minneapolis, Mayor James Gray released J. C. Reid from service without charges or explanation. Although Reid was honorably discharged, many believe it was because of his republican views.
Reid was not afraid to voice his opinion or stance on the affairs that affected the Midwest’s colored population. And in 1896, he established the Colored Citizens Publishing Company.
In 1899, J. C. Reid, along with J.M. Griffin and Charles Turner (natives of Georgia), merged together and formed The African American Advance, a weekly publication informing the black community and the Midwest of issues directly affecting their lives. Florence Duckett, a Missouri native, became its only female editor. During the Advance’s two-year run, the publication reported political and societal news, the comings and goings of its residents, church events and great debates hosted at Bethesda Church.
The African American Advance featured a story celebrating the accomplishment of Miss May Harriet Black, the daughter of James and Belle Black, who became the first African American to graduate from Duluth High School in 1899.
Joseph C. Reid’s entrepreneurial spirit, along with that of James Kroger, sparked the opening of a small café called The Advance, serving hot meals and political conversations.
Reid answered a higher calling in December of 1901, when he ceased publication and moved to Fort Sheridan, Iowa, to study in the seminary. Upon graduation, he settled in Sioux Falls, Iowa, as the minister of Mount Zion Baptist Church.
Joseph C. Reid and his wife, Augusta, are buried in Grant County, Iowa, at Rose Hill Cemetery.
Celebrate the lives of extraordinary African Americans in your community by submitting your stories to Camille at millymouse@live.com.