Listen Live
Majic ATL Featured Video
CLOSE
Political Pioneers

Circa 1870, from left: Sen. Hiram Revels of Mississippi with some of the first Black members of Congress, Benjamin Turner, Robert De Large, Josiah Walls, Jefferson Long, Joseph Rainey and Robert Brown Elliot. | Source: MPI / Getty

UPDATED: 9:00 a.m. ET, May 18, 2022 —

The nearly all-white upper chamber of the U.S. Congress is facing the increased prospects of a healthy dose of diversity after two Black candidates for U.S. Senate won their respective Democratic primaries on Tuesday night.

Cheri Beasley, North Carolina’s former Chief Justice, won her contest in North Carolina and Charles Booker, a former state representative, won his in Kentucky.

Cheri Beasley, former chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court, is running to become the Democratic nominee for Senate in Tuesday's primary election

Senate candidate Cheri Beasley reacts as she takes the stage during the North Carolina Democratic Party’s election night party at The Dock at Seabord Station in Raleigh, N.C., May 17, 2022. | Source: The Washington Post / Getty

Victories in November for one or both of them ensures Black history will be made.

If Beasley wins, she would not only become the lone Black woman in the U.S. Senate, but she would also be the third current sitting Black Senator (out of 100), the 12th ever Black Senator and only the third Black woman Senator in U.S. history. Beasley faces a Donald-Trump endorsed Republican rival in Rep. Ted Budd, a sitting Congressman.

If Booker wins, he would become the 11th-ever Black man to serve in the U.S. Senate.

If both win, there will be a record number of both sitting Black Senators and those who have served in Capitol Hill’s most exclusive club.

Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock, who won a heated runoff election last year in a special election, is already up for re-election and although he does not have a challenger in the primary, he is poised to face Trump-endorsed Herschel Walker, whose been making serious fundraising strides.

The U.S. Senate is such an exclusive group that in the entire 233 years that it has existed, all but four Black Senators were elected and just two of that already small number have been women. Currently, there are three Black Senators: Warnock, Democrat Cory Booker of New Jersey and Republican Tim Scott of South Carolina.

The glaring Black woman Senator void was left after then-California Sen. Kamala Harris was elected U.S. Vice President in 2020, making her the first Black vice president in American history.

Hopes were raised last year when California Gov. Gavin Newsom had the chance to fill Harris’ Senate seat with another Black woman. Instead, the 2021 Congress opened without a Black woman Senator for the first time in four years.

To be sure, the ensuing debate following Newsom’s decision had everything to do with the absence of a Black woman in the U.S. Senate and nothing to do with the fact that then-Senate-designate and California Secretary of State Alex Padilla became the first Latino to represent California in the U.S. Senate. It did, however, have to do with the representation of Black people in the U.S. Senate, something that has historically been all but a novelty.

Only in recent years has the election of Black candidates to the U.S. Senate picked up steam.

Distinguished African-Americans

Circa 1883: Head-and-shoulders portraits of “Distinguished Colored Men” Frederick Douglass, Robert Brown Elliott, U.S. Sen. Blanche K. Bruce, William Wells Brown, Md., Prof. R.T. Greener, Rt. Rev. Richard Allen, J.H. Rainey, E.D. Bassett, John Mercer Langston, P.B.S. Pinchback and Henry Highland Garnet. | Source: Buyenlarge / Getty

It’s been 152 years since the first Black person was elected to the U.S. Senate, with another following four years later in 1874.

But it would be more than 90 years later until the next Black man was elected to the U.S. Senate.

It would be another quarter of a century until the next Black person — the first Black woman — would win a Senate election.

A little more than a decade later, America got its next Black Senator — one who would notably go on to become the first Black person elected president of the United States.

That seemingly opened the relative floodgates to usher in a historic era that would include four more Black U.S. Senators, culminating with two of whom had legitimate runs for the White House.

With the next round of U.S. Senate elections coming up in November, who will be next to join the exclusive club of Black Senators?

Scroll down to better acquaint yourselves with every Black U.S. Senator in American history, in chronological order.

The post Here’s Every Black US Senator In American History appeared first on NewsOne.

Here’s Every Black US Senator In American History  was originally published on newsone.com

1. Hiram Rhoades Revels

Hiram Rhoades Revels Source:Getty

Hiram Rhoades Revels (1822-1901), an African American clergyman was the first Black person to be elected to the United States Senate. He was elected in 1870 in Mississippi after Reconstruction but only served two years.

2. Blanche K. Bruce

Blanche K. Bruce Source:Getty

Blanche K. Bruce, who was the Accessor and Sheriff of Bolivar County, Mississippi, was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1874. He was the first African American to serve a full term in the Senate. He, like Revels, was elected by the state legislature.

“Bruce focused on a number of state and national issues including the construction of levees along the Mississippi River, the development of a more humane and equitable federal Indian policy and the desegregation of the United States Army,” according to the Black Past website. “However one of his most memorable addresses in Congress occurred in March 1876 when he called for a Senate investigation of the racial and political violence that marked the Mississippi gubernatorial election of 1875.”

3. Edward Brooke III

Edward Brooke III Source:Getty

Former United States Senator from Massachusetts, Edward Brooke III (1919 – 2015) after conceding victory to the challenger, Paul Tsongas, 7th November 1978.

He was elected senator of Massachusetts as a Republican in 1966. He was the first Black senator elected since Reconstruction. He was also the first African American elected to the Senate by popular vote.

4. Carol Moseley Braun

Carol Moseley Braun Source:Getty

Carol Moseley Braun, of Illinois, was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1992 and served a single term. She was the first Black woman elected to the U.S. Senate.

Pictured: U.S. Senator-elect Carol Moseley Braun declares her victory on Nov. 3, 1992, in Chicago. She called her campaign a step toward a new diversity in government.

5. Barack Obama

Barack Obama Source:Getty

Barack Obama, of Illinois, was elected to the United States Senate in 2004, making him the fifth Black person to serve in the Senate.

Notably, he would go on to become the first Black president of the United States after serving only a portion of his first and only term in the U.S. Senate. 

6. Roland Burris

Roland Burris Source:Getty

In 2009, Senate Democrats grudgingly accepted embattled then-Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s hand-selected Senate appointee, Roland Burris, as they sought to break an impasse over then-President-elect Barack Obama’s former seat.

But the appointment was mired in controversy in a so-called “pay to play” scheme that resulted in an investigation into bribery in exchange for Obama’s former Senate seat.

Burris was never punished, but Blagojevich was impeached, driven from office after he was accused of trying to sell the Senate seat and ultimately convicted and sentenced to prison.

He served in the Senate until late November 2010 when his successor was chosen in a special election. 

7. Tim Scott

Tim Scott Source:Getty

Tim Scott in 2013 became the first African American since Reconstruction to represent a southern state in the Senate. The Republican was appointed to the U.S. Senate during his first term as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives. He was officially elected in a special election in 2014 and then re-elected to his current term in 2016. 

Scott has emerged as a villain of sorts by consistently siding against the best interests of Black America, including most recently trying to convince voters that Donald Trump is not racist

Pictured: Sen. Scott  at the South Carolina Inland Port groundbreaking ceremony in Greer, S.C., on March 1, 2013.

8. William “Mo” Cowan

William "Mo" Cowan Source:Getty

William “Mo” Cowan was named interim U.S. Senator of Massachusetts on Jan. 30, 2013. Then a senior advisor to Gov. Deval Patrick, Cowan filled the position until a successor was named for departing Sen. John Kerry, who was named Secretary of State for Obama’s presidential administration.

Cowan served for less than a year until July 15, 2013.

9. Cory Booker

Cory Booker Source:Getty

Cory Booker became New Jersey’s first Black U.S. Senator after winning a special election in 2013. He was elected to a full term in 2014 and re-elected to another this past November following an unsuccessful presidential campaign.

Pictured: Senate Judiciary Committee member Sen. Booker delivers remarks about Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh during a mark up hearing in the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C.., on Sept. 28, 2018.

10. Kamala Harris

Kamala Harris Source:Getty

Kamala Harris became the first Black person — man or woman — to serve as U.S. Senator for the state of California. She was elected in 2016. Her inaugural term was cut short after she was elected the first Black vice president of the United States as Joe Biden’s running mate in 2020.

Pictured: Sen. Harris questions Attorney General William Barr as Barr testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee at the Dirksen Building in Washington, D.C., on May 1, 2019.

11. Rev. Raphael Warnock

Rev. Raphael Warnock Source:Getty

Rev. Raphael Warnock beat Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler to become the first Black U.S. Senator from Georgia following an intense runoff campaign and a close runoff election in 2021.