George Thompson Ruby (1841-1882)

George Thompson Ruby was born in New York in 1841 but reared in Portland, Maine. After acquiring a sound liberal arts education there, he journeyed to Haiti, where he worked as a correspondent for the Pine and Palm, a New England newspaper edited by abolitionist James Redpath. Ruby sent information about Haiti to African Americans in the United States. Ruby settled in 1864 in Louisiana, where he was employed as a schoolteacher. He left Louisiana two years later after being beaten by a white mob while trying to establish a school for black children at Jacksboro. In 1866 George Ruby joined the Freedmen’s Bureau at Galveston and began administering the agency’s schools while simultaneously serving as a correspondent for the New Orleans Tribune. He briefly published the Galveston Standard. Between 1866 and 1867 Ruby was a traveling agent for the Bureau, visiting Washington, Austin, Bastrop, Fort Bend, and other counties to establish chapters of the Union League and temperance societies. In 1869 Ruby was appointed deputy collector of customs at Galveston, an important political patronage position. During his tenure he was on friendly terms with Texas Governor Edmund J. Davis and with such prominent white Galvestonians as Victor McMahan of … Continue reading George Thompson Ruby (1841-1882)