John E. Bush (Mosaic Templars of America)

John Edward Bush (1856-1916) was the co-founder of the Mosaic Templars of America.

Bush, an African American, was born a slave in Moscow, Tennessee in 1856. Shortly after the outbreak of the U.S. Civil War, when large numbers of slaves were sent South to escape the advance of the Union Army, young Bush and his mother were taken to Arkansas. He grew up in a one-room cottage and was one of 12 children. His mother was a nurse and spent comparatively little time at home. Food was uncertain, and the children largely put to their wits to get enough. His mother struggled to give her children an education, but Bush ultimately received relatively little formal schooling. As soon as he was able to do work and until he was fifteen, he was apprenticed to a brick-maker. He learned this trade and then went to teaching school in the country districts. It was while he was a teacher there and elsewhere that he obtained most of his book knowledge.[1]

It was while he was still a teacher in the country schools that he made his first great business venture. He bought a lot for $150, promising to pay for it in installments of $10 per month. Worried that he might lose his investment if something prevented him from making the payments, Bush scrimped and saved to pay the property off in six months, when he was 19 years old. Soon after, he built a house on the property and got married. By this time he had become a teacher in the Capitol Hill School, but he lost his job immediately after he was married. He worked for a time in Hot Springs, then returned in 1884 to run for county clerk. He was unsuccessful, possibly because of election fraud. He was compelled to go back as a school teacher into the country again. After this he was appointed railway postal clerk. He was in the mail service about ten years. At this time he began actively trading in real estate.[1]

Bush lost his position in the mail service when Grover Cleveland was elected president and went back to teaching school again. At the time of his discharge he was superintendent of mails at Little Rock. After this he returned to the profession of teaching and taught for several years until under President Benjamin Harrison he was appointed Receiver of the General Land Office.[1]

In association with Chester W. Keatts, Bush organized a mutual benefit and benevolent organization, known as the Mosaic Templars of America.[1]

Bush was a significant landowner in the city of Little Rock and its suburbs.[1]

References

  1. Washington, Booker T. (1907). The Negro in Business. Hertel, Jenkins & Company. pp. 222-26. OCLC 682185. Washington, Booker T., “John S. Trower, A Successful Caterer and Man of Business.” The Negro in Business. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.

Further reading

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