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When gold was discovered in California, Gibbs headed west, but did not reach the gold fields. Instead, denied the chance to practice his building trade because of white discrimination, he and a partner made a fortune selling mens clothing and boots in San Francisco. Gibbs is credited with beginning the first African-American newspaper in San Francisco the Mirror of the Times and joined with other Blacks in the fight against a proposed state poll tax. The discovery of gold in British Columbia drew Gibbs north. He operated a store in Victoria that was very successful and was elected to represent a wealthy district in the Common Council of Victoria. Gibbs read law with an attorney in British Columbia before attending the law department of Oberlin College about 1870 and receiving a degree. At this point, he married to Mariah A. Alexander of Kentucky, with whom he had four children: Donald, Horace, Ida Alexander Hunt, and Harriet Gibbs Marshall. Three of his children, as well as his wife, graduated from Oberlin College. His family did not join him when he moved to Arkansas, but he kept close ties with his children. Gibbs was recruited to Arkansas by two prominent African-Americans, Richard A. Dawson and J.H. Johnson, whom he met at a South Carolina convention in 1871. Gibbs arrived in Little Rock (Pulaski County), Arkansas, in early 1872 and was admitted to the Arkansas bar later that same year. Mifflin Gibbs is known to have entered into brief partnerships with two other African-American lawyers. The first, with Black attorney Lloyd G. Wheeler in 1873-74, was brief. Wheeler & Gibbs represented African-Americans Richard A. Dawson, W. Hines Furbush (both state legislators), James R. Roland, and S.Y. Wheeler in the only conviction under the Civil Rights Act of 1873. On June 2, 1873, they successfully sued a Little Rock barkeeper for refusing to serve the plaintiffs. The barkeeper was assessed fines and court costs of $46.80. In 1876, Gibbs joined attorney Tabbs Gross in practice for about one year. Mifflin Gibbs does not appear in any official records of appellate court opinions during his career, nor was he listed as an attorney in city directories between 1891 and 1915. Newspapers in 1888, however, referred to Gibbs attendance at meetings of the Little Rock Bar Association. Gibbs was primarily a politician. Shortly after his admission to the bar, Gibbs was appointed attorney for Pulaski County. He served in that role for several months, then was elected Municipal Judge of the city of Little Rock in 1873-74. A later publication hailed him as the first elected black municipal police judge in the nation. In 1877, Gibbs was appointed Register of the United States Land Office for the Little Rock District of Arkansas, a position he held until 1886. After a brief practice interlude, during which he was a law partner with Roderick B. Thomas (see listing) for approximately two years, Gibbs was named Receiver of Public Moneys at Little Rock Land District in 1889. He held that position until 1897 when he was appointed American consul to Madagascar. After he resigned as consul in 1901, Gibbs returned to Little Rock, where he continued to be influential in the Republican Party until his death. Gibbs devoted significant energy to African-American education, serving as a member of the Board of Visitors of the Little Rock school system in the 1880s. A public school in Little Rock was named for him. He also was active in Booker T. Washingtons National Negro Business League, helping to create an Arkansas branch of the organization. Gibbs himself founded Arkansas second African-American-owned bank, the Capitol City Savings Bank, in 1903. It failed within a few years and he was sued by Scipio Jones (see listing) on behalf of shareholders. Despite this failure, at the time of his death in 1915, Gibbs owned stock valued at $30,000 in several corporations. |
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