A Black Gambler’s World of Liquor,
Vice, and Presidential Politics
William Thomas Scott of Illinois, 1839–1917
Bruce L. Mouser
Foreword by Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
Best Special Interest Books, selected by the American Association of School Librarians Best Books for General Audiences, selected by the Public Library Reviewers
“As Mouser shows, Scott spent his life figuring out—and satisfying—men’s
interests with liquor, gambling, and women, and . . . [he] refused to be
complicit in backing politicians who took him and the broader base of first-generation
black voters for dupes. . . . Scott saw the political game for what
it was: a game of power.”
—Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
William Thomas Scott (1839–1917) was an entrepreneur and political activist
from East Saint Louis and Cairo, Illinois, who in 1904 briefly became the first
African American nominated by a national party for president of the United
States before his scandalous past forced him to step aside. A free man before the
Civil War, Scott was a charismatic hustler who built his fortune through both vice
trades and legal businesses including hotels, saloons, and real estate. Publisher
and editor of the Cairo Gazette and an outspoken advocate for equal rights, he
believed in political patronage and frequently rebelled against political bosses
who failed to deliver, whether they were white, black, Republican, or Democrat.
Scott helped build the National Negro Liberty Party to forward economic,
political, and legal rights for his race. But the hustling that had brought him business
success proved his undoing as a national political figure. He was the NNLP’s
initial presidential nominee, only to be replaced by a better-educated and more
socially acceptable candidate, George Edwin Taylor.
Praise
“This is a fascinating and informative
look into the life of a forgotten but
important African American leader.
. . . Scott emerges as a powerful,
interesting, and even enigmatic
leader working on both sides of the
law to further his own interests and
those of the larger African American
community.”
—Roger Bridges, Illinois
State University
“The work of a master historian and storyteller. Mouser’s rich and nuanced scholarship
adds clarity and depth to our understanding of African Americans and
third-party politics, bringing us into the wider, complex, and contradictory world
which Scott was both a product of and helped to produce.”
—Omar H. Ali, author of In the Lion’s Mouth: Black Populism in the New South,
1886–1900
Resources
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October 2014
LC: 2014007451 E
210 pp. 6 x 9
1 b/w illus.
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