American politician
Ovide Gregory, sometimes written as Ovid Gregory,[1] (d. September 2, 1869) was a politician in Alabama during the Reconstruction era. A Creole, he was multilingual and freeborn.[2] He served in the Alabama House of Representatives.[3]
There was open hostility and racial to Gregory and the other black member of the legislator, with some questioning the legislator and constitution,[4] with racism openly expressed on the front pages of papers.[5]
He supported legislation to outlaw African Americans "going" with Creoles. He was a rival of John Carraway.[6] He advocated for more schools.[7]
He died September 2, 1869, in Pascagoula, Mississippi, after an illness that had persisted for six months.[8]
References