John J. Irvine
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John J. Irvine | |
|---|---|
| Born | August 3, 1852 |
| Occupations | Politician, railroad worker, stationary engineer |
| Political party | Republican |
John J. Irvine (born August 3, 1852) was an American railroad worker, engineer, and politician in Chattanooga, Tennessee. He was clerk of the circuit court of Chattanooga from 1886 to 1890 and he ran for mayor of the town in 1891. In 1899, he was a noted leader of a movement to establish an African-American colony in the Western United States.
John J. Irvine was born near Clarksville, Virginia, the slave of R. M. Scott on August 3, 1852. In 1866 his mother died and he took a job as a farm hand and sought his education during the evenings and Sundays. On December 29, 1868, his father and four brothers decided to leave Virginia and move south. They first took work in Marion, Alabama. building the Selma, Marion, & Memphis Railroad, making them employees of former Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forest. After three months, the family moved on and took work as sharecroppers on a farm owned by W. N. Seldon near Faunsdale, Alabama. After a year, Irvine found the employment condition unacceptable and moved on to Carthage, Tennessee where he took work on the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad, which failed after six months. He then took work at the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. There he became interested in machinery and engines. After a year, he moved to Chattanooga, Tennessee, where he took work as a stationary engineer.[1]