Marse Callaway (original) (raw)

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Marse Callaway (born 1888) known as (Mr. Republican) was a black political boss and founder of the Baltimore Police Training School, a black policeman's training academy in 1937.[1][2] He was elected as the President of an organization[_which?_] which aimed to bring together Republican voters, improve voter registration rates especially for the Republican party and to ensure the wellbeing of black people overall.[_citation needed_]

Callaway was a real estate broker and an influential figure in Republican Politics in Maryland. In 1923 when he became president of the Baltimore Republican Party. In 1935, Callaway led a lobbying effort to persuade the Maryland legislature to study the question of whether to make the historically black Morgan College a state institution. A legislative commission ended up making a recommendation in favor of transferring Morgan to the state of Maryland, a move that was finalized in 1937.[3] He organised Theodore McKeldin's 1950 campaign for the position of Mayor of Baltimore.[_citation needed_] He was recognized at a meeting of over 1500 people at the Bethel AME Church in Baltimore in 1939 for his work.

Later in his life[_when?_], Marse was charged with eight counts of receiving money under false pretenses and one count of failing to pay a former employee seven weeks wages.[_citation needed_] Twelve further charges of larceny after trust of funds paid by persons as deposits on pieces of property were added to the indictment to which he pleaded guilty. He was sentenced to a three-year suspended sentence and when summing up Judge Robert France asserted that Callaway had been "a respected and outstanding citizen in his own community and the city of Baltimore". Callaway was also ordered to pay restitution.[_citation needed_]

Marse Callaway died on May 19, 1952, at Provident Hospital.[4]

  1. ^ "Governor Helps Bury 'Mr. GOP': 400 Others Attend Calloway Funeral". The Baltimore Afro-American. May 31, 1952. pp. 1–2.
  2. ^ "CALLAWAY, GOP LEADER, DEAD: Fought For Negro Representation In Political Posts". The Baltimore Sun. May 20, 1952. p. 18.
  3. ^ Levin, Harry (February 8, 1958). "Marse Callaway: A Master Politician". The Baltimore Afro-American. p. A5.
  4. ^ "Callaway, GOP Leader, Dead". The Baltimore Sun. May 20, 1952. ProQuest 541793702.