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Early
in his career, George Ruby worked in Haiti as a correspondent
and helped African Americans seeking freedom from slavery
and racial strife. Later, after being beaten by a white
mob while trying to establish a Common School in Jackboro,
Louisiana, Ruby moved to Galveston County in 1866. He
joined the Freedmen's Bureau and administered its schools.
By
1868, Ruby was closely associated with the Union League.
This enabled him to rise within the ranks of the Republican
Party and influence the large African-American constituency
of the party. He was a delegate to the National Republican
Convention, the only African American from Texas. He also
was one of ten African Americans elected delegates to
Texas's Constitutional Convention of 1868-69.
As
a Senator in the 12th Legislature, Ruby was appointed
to the Judiciary, Militia, Education, and State Affairs
committees, which performed 75 percent of the work of
the Senate that session. Ruby introduced successful bills
to incorporate Texas railroads and a number of insurance
companies and to provide for the geological and agricultural
survey of the state. According to one scholar, "Senator
Ruby became one of the most influential men of the 12th
and 13th Legislatures." Another account stated that
he was the "most prominent black politician of Reconstruction."
Ruby established Galveston's first Labor Union of Colored
Men. Before the Civil War, whites dominated work on the
docks, but after 1870, African Americans received a fair
share of the work, thanks to Ruby's efforts.
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