词条 | Needham B. Broughton |
释义 |
| honorific_prefix = | name = Needham B. Broughton | honorific_suffix = | image = Needham Bryant Broughton.jpg | image_size = 200px | caption = Broughton circa. 1880-1900 |state_senate1 = North Carolina |district1 = Wake County |term_start1 = 1901 |term_end1 = 1903 | birth_name = Needham Bryant Broughton | birth_date = February 14, 1848 | birth_place = Near Auburn, North Carolina, United States | resting_place = Historic Oakwood Cemetery, Raleigh, North Carolina | death_date = May 26, 1914 | death_place = Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | party = Democratic Party | spouse = Caroline R. Lougee | father = Joseph Broughton | mother = Mary Bagwell }} Needham Bryant Broughton (February 14, 1848 – May 26, 1914) was an American printer, temperance activist, and politician who served as a North Carolina state senator from 1901 to 1903. He co-owned a prosperous printing business, Edwards & Broughton, and was a member of several commercial organizations. An active member in the North Carolina Baptist community, he served as secretary of the Southern Baptist Convention for approximately 30 years. Edwards was born in 1848 near Auburn, North Carolina. Eight years later his family moved to Raleigh and he enrolled in public school. At the age of 13 he took up work in a printing office. After several years of similar activities which saw him employed in Washington D.C. and New York City, Broughton returned to Raleigh and married. In 1872 he and C.B. Edwards purchased the printing office of a defunct newspaper and established the Edwards & Broughton Printing Company. It quickly became one of the largest printers in North Carolina, and for a time it did most of the printing and binding of state publications. Broughton was a devout Baptist who acted as a lay preacher, deacon, Sunday school superintendent, and secretary of the Southern Baptist Convention for about 30 years. Inspired by his religious convictions, he ardently campaigned for temperance and the prohibition of alcohol in North Carolina. Though a white supremacist, he collaborated with black leaders to ban the substance. In 1900 he accepted the Democratic Party's nomination for a state senate seat to prevent it from being filled by an anti-prohibition candidate. He won the election and served one term in office. Broughton also supported public education, securing tax increases for Raleigh's schools and serving on the boards of trustees for several state institutions. He fell ill in 1913 and was forced to retire, dying the following year in a hospital in Philadelphia. Needham B. Broughton High School in Raleigh was named in his honor. BiographyNeedham Broughton was born on February 14, 1848 on a farm near Auburn, North Carolina to Joseph Broughton and Mary Bagwell.{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=181}} His paternal grandfather was an English immigrant.{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=182}} Joseph Broughton died in 1854,{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=181}} leaving Bagwell to care for Needham, his three brothers, and his three sisters by herself.{{sfn|Dowd|1888|p=281}} In 1856, Broughton moved to Raleigh, North Carolina{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=181}} with his family and studied in public schools for five years.{{sfn|Dowd|1888|p=281}} Printing careerWhen Broughton was 13 years old he was hired by editor John W. Syme to work in The Raleigh Register's printing office. When the publication was suspended in 1864, he was subsequently hired by John L. Pennington to perform similar work for the Daily Progress.[1] Upon the conclusion of the Civil War in 1865, Broughton traveled to Richmond, Virginia to find employment. He worked for the Richmond Examiner for six months before moving to Washington, D. C. to work for the Congressional Record. Quitting after the close of Congress' 1867 session, in August he left for Baltimore. After a brief stay there and in Philadelphia, he settled in New York City. Broughton struggled to obtain employment for two weeks, and spent one day working on the New York World.{{sfn|Dowd|1888|p=281}} He then set type for the New York Herald for over three months.{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=181}}{{sfn|Dowd|1888|p=281}} Broughton returned to Raleigh in February 1869.{{sfn|Dowd|1888|p=281}} In May he married Caroline R. Lougee.{{sfn|Dowd|1888|p=282}} They had six children.{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=181}} In 1872 Broughton and C. B. Edwards{{efn|The two had met while working in the office of the Daily Progress.[1]}} purchased the office of the defunct Raleigh Standard on credit{{sfn|Dowd|1888|p=281}} and established the Edwards & Broughton Printing Company.{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=181}} It quickly became one of the largest printers in North Carolina, and between 1887 and 1894 it did most of the printing and binding of state publications.[1] By 1913 Edwards & Broughton employed nearly 100 persons and had expanded to offer engraving services. Edwards retired in 1910 and Broughton subsequently became president of their printing firm.{{sfn|Amis|1913|pp=127, 181}} As the enterprise printed labor union and Farmers' Alliance publications, Broughton joined the Knights of Labor and the Alliance.{{sfn|Beckel|2010|pp=118, 139}} On October 20, 1903 he was elected president of the North Carolina Master Printers' Association.[2] Broughton was also a member of the North Carolina Merchants' Association and the North Carolina Chamber of Commerce.[3] For a time he owned The Biblical Recorder[1] and held stock in the News and Observer Publishing Company.{{sfn|Craig|2013|pp=139–140}} He occasionally contributed writings to the Recorder and to Raleigh's two daily newspapers.{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=181}} Religious activities{{Quote box|width=246px|bgcolor=#c6dbf7|align=right|quote="Broughton was a very ardent Christian, and whenever there was a religious revival going on, all business had to take second place. One week Mr. Broughton left his business and went to Greensboro to take an active part in a revival being held by a Quaker woman evangelist."|source=Josephus Daniels, politician and friend of Broughton{{sfn|Daniels|2012|loc=Chapter XI : The Opening Guns in the War on the University}}}}Broughton was a member of the First Baptist Church in Raleigh. In 1874 he and J.S. Allen led several other parishioners in organizing a new congregation and purchasing a church on Swain Street, which they subsequently named Second Baptist Church. Within two years the congregation decided that a larger building was needed, so land was purchased at the corner of Hargett and Person Streets and the Tabernacle Baptist Church was established.{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=101}} Broughton was made a deacon and appointed superintendent of its Sunday school. In the late 1890s he was made vice-president of the Sunday School Board of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) and a member of the executive committee of the International Sunday School Association. He held all three positions until 1913.[1] In those capacities he attended numerous international Sunday school conferences, including a world convention in Rome. He also served as secretary of the SBC for approximately 30 years{{sfn|Amis|1913|pp=182–183}} and acted as a lay preacher.{{sfn|Annual Report of the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the State of North Carolina|1894|p=124}} Involvement in public affairsBroughton staunchly supported public education[1] and was an avid supporter of the Chautauqua movement.{{sfn|Williams|1901|p=196}} He served as the first chairman of the board of Raleigh's public schools.[4] In the 1888 he successfully lobbied for a property tax increase to save the city's schools from bankruptcy.[1] Broughton also pressed for Meredith College and the North Carolina Agricultural and Mechanic College to be located in Raleigh. He served as a trustee of both schools, as well as of Wake Forest College, the Oxford Orphan Asylum, and the State School for the Deaf, Dumb and the Blind,[1] and was a member of National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race's advisory board.{{sfn|Davis|2013|p=7}} Due to his religious beliefs, Broughton was a member of the temperance movement and a strong supporter of the prohibition of the sale and consumption of alcohol.[1]{{sfn|Amis|1913|p=183}} For five years he was Grand Chief Templar of the North Carolina Order of Good Templars.{{sfn|Amis|1887|p=146}} In 1887 he convinced African Methodist Episcopal Zion bishop James Walker Hood to appeal to blacks to support a Raleigh referendum banning alcohol. Nevertheless, the electorate rejected the proposed restriction.{{sfn|Beckel|2010|p=105}} Broughton was elected president of the North Carolina Anti-Saloon League in 1902.{{sfn|Johnson|2009|p=42}} The following year he appealed to Raleigh's black leaders to join whites in a campaign against "Sin and Satan" and improve the morality of their race, chiefly by supporting temperance. He told Charles Norfleet Hunter, a prominent black educator, that by rejecting alcohol, black voters could prove themselves to be responsible citizens, despite their disenfranchisement. Having been persuaded by Broughton, Hunter appealed to blacks to vote to remove saloons from the city of Raleigh. A local referendum to ban the establishments succeeded, with most black voters' support.{{sfn|Haley|2014|pp=149–150}} Broughton's wider advocacy was also ultimately successful; in 1908 a statewide referendum approved a ban of the sale of alcohol, though the residents of Wake County had voted against it. However, the state lost revenue generated by liquor taxes, temporarily jeopardizing the funding of public education.{{sfn|Johnson|2009|p=42}} Despite collaborating with blacks on temperance, Broughton supported white supremacy.{{sfn|Gilmore|1992|p=58}} In 1870 he suggested that the Raleigh Typographical Union modify its rules to prevent black men form joining it.{{sfn|Beckel|2010|p=78}} In 1889 Broughton was appointed by the governor to the North Carolina Board of Agriculture. He served as chairman of its finance committee.{{sfn|1st Annual Catalogue of the North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts|1890|p=2}}{{sfn|7th Annual Catalogue of the North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts|1896|p=2}} Broughton ran on the Democratic Party's ticket in 1896 in the Wake County constituency for a seat in the North Carolina House of Representatives. He was defeated by incumbent James H. Young by a slim margin.{{sfn|Haley|2014|p=93}}{{sfn|Craig|2013|p=173}}{{efn|According to Haley, Broughton was defeated by two votes.{{sfn|Haley|2014|p=93}} Craig put the margin at 10 votes.{{sfn|Craig|2013|p=173}}}} In 1900 he accepted the Democratic nomination to the Wake County seat for the North Carolina Senate to prevent it from being taken by an anti-prohibition candidate.[1] His decision was made at the behest of fellow temperance supporter Josephus Daniels, who disliked the local Democratic political machine's pro-alcohol stance. Broughton's candidacy outraged the machine members, who, mindful of his popularity among white Christians, felt the issue of prohibition would divide their electoral support after the Democratic Party had only recently regained control of the state government. Daniels reached a compromise with the machine's leaders, whereby they would support Broughton if Daniels did not try to pass a prohibition bill through the legislature. Broughton was thus elected to the office,{{sfn|Craig|2013|pp=198–199}} serving from 1901 until 1903.{{sfn|Miller|Simonton|2017|p=77}} He did not seek reelection.[1] DeathBroughton fell ill in 1913 and retired from public life. He died on May 26, 1914 in a hospital in Philadelphia, survived by his wife and children.[1] He was buried in the Historic Oakwood Cemetery in Raleigh.{{sfn|Miller|Simonton|2017|p=77}} LegacyYears after Broughton's death, C. B. Edwards sent a letter to the Raleigh Public School Board, requesting that the new high school in Raleigh—then without a name—be named for Broughton in honor of his service to public education in the city. The dedication ceremony for Needham B. Broughton High School took place in 1930, towards the end of the school year.{{sfn|Barbee|1943|p=67}} His nephew, J. Melville Broughton served as Governor of North Carolina.[1] Alcohol remained prohibited in North Carolina until 1935.{{sfn|Johnson|2009|p=42}} Notes{{notelist}}Citations1. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 {{cite web| url = https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/broughton-needham-bryant| title = Broughton, Needham Bryant| last = Newell| first = Charles A.| date = 1979| website = NCpedia| publisher = North Carolina Government & Heritage Library| access-date = November 24, 2018}} 2. ^{{cite news| title= Officers of the North Carolina Master Printers' Association| newspaper = American Printer and Lithographer| publisher = Oswald Publishing Company| volume = 37| date = 1903| location = New York| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=x43nAAAAMAAJ&dq=|page= 330}} 3. ^{{cite news| title = Big Southern Firm| newspaper = The American Stationer| page = 32| volume = 68| date = September 3, 1910| url =https://books.google.com/books?id=GWpYAAAAYAAJ&dq=}} 4. ^{{cite news| last = Ranii| first = David| title = Former North Carolina Commerce Recruitment Chief, Thomas Broughton, Dies| newspaper = Knight Ridder Tribune Business News| page = 1| date = November 17, 2002| url = https://search-proquest-com.prox.lib.ncsu.edu/docview/463372450?pq-origsite=summon| access-date = November 25, 2018}} References{{refbegin|2}}
16 : Wake Forest University people|Businesspeople from North Carolina|North Carolina state senators|North Carolina Democrats|Southern Baptists|American temperance activists|American people of English descent|American printers|American white supremacists|Burials at Historic Oakwood Cemetery|1848 births|1914 deaths|19th-century American politicians|20th-century American politicians|19th-century American businesspeople|20th-century American businesspeople |
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