Alfred Newton Handy

Alfred Newton Handy (Madison County)

State House: 1870-1875

Born: c. 1830 in Georgia
Died: January 8, 1913 in Canton, MS

Methodist minister and member of the first election board held in Mississippi during Reconstruction. Handy is listed on the 1870 census in Canton with wife Martha and two sons, Newton and Henry. In 1880, he appears with wife Corinne, his son Newton, and a stepson named John Hall. In 1900, he is listed with wife Ella and daughter Mattie. Newton Handy (b. 1855) married a Laura Jones, and his family is well documented in Madison County in later records.

Handy’s descendant, Newton Alfred Handy III, wrote this Handy family history available through the Mississippi Digital Library.

“Alfred Newton Handy was born in Georgia around 1830. He was the first Black who held office in Canton and was appointed by the Board of Police in the courthouse on September 20, 1869 as a replacement for Vice-Admiral Pendleton… At this time, he was the largest Black landowner in Madison County (total assets $2,200.00). He was also the founder and pastor of Asbury United Methodist Church in Canton.”
(Newton Alfred Handy III, Handy family history)

Signature of Alfred Handy
Signature of Alfred Handy

Links:
Memorial on Find A Grave

Weekly Mississippi Pilot, March 5, 1870
Weekly Mississippi Pilot, Dec 17, 1870
Petition to Governor Ames, Feb 12, 1874
Petition to Governor Ames, Feb 12, 1874
American Citizen, August 8, 1874
Canton Mail, January 2, 1875
Canton Mail, January 9, 1875
Weekly Mississippi Pilot, Feb 20, 1875
Canton Mail, March 13, 1875
Canton Mail, April 10, 1875
Canton Mail, May 29, 1875
Canton Mail, June 5, 1875
Canton Mail, August 28, 1875
American Citizen, October 21, 1876
Weekly Democrat, January 13, 1886
Vicksburg Evening Post, January 9, 1913
Alfred Handy headstone
Headstone of Alfred Handy, 2021