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In 1868, the first year that the bulk of the African- American population could vote in Arkansas, Grey was among the eight African-American members elected to the second post-Civil War Constitutional Convention. He was considered the most articulate of the eight. He spoke on the convention floor more than 25 times, primarily on matters relating to African-American welfare. He and other African-American representatives voted as a block for continuation of the Freedmens Bureau and against a minority report that would have restricted the right to vote to white males. A new state Constitution was passed on March 14, 1868, with the vote of all eight African-Americans and 52 other delegates. It guaranteed African-Americans the right to vote and to hold public office, and provided for free public, but segregated, schools. In 1874, the Democratic Party regained the governorship and a legislative majority. The legislature immediately voted to hold a third post-war Constitutional Convention. When it was announced, Grey spoke out against it, correctly anticipating that the delegates would try to take away African-American citizenship rights. In 1875, he was elected to fill a vacancy in the state Senate. In the 1880 Census, Grey is listed as paralyzed and he disappeared from politics after his state Senate service. Having joined the St. John Masonic Lodge in Cincinnati in 1852, Grey was named first Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Arkansas when it was established in 1873. He was married to Henrietta Winslow of Cincinnati, and they had nine children (among them Nancy R, William, Charles, Susan, Anna, and Oliver). A member of the A.M.E. Church, which he joined in 1860, Grey was also a local preacher. He died on November 8, 1888, and the Grand Lodge erected a magnificent monument marking his grave in Helena. |
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