Background
He was born into slavery in Halifax County, North Carolina near the town of Weldon. He was taken with his mother to Alabama at age five, as part of the forced migration of the internal slave trade.
United States representative politician
He was born into slavery in Halifax County, North Carolina near the town of Weldon. He was taken with his mother to Alabama at age five, as part of the forced migration of the internal slave trade.
Turner received no early education. By clandestine study he obtained a fair education. He seems to have remained enslaved until the Emancipation Proclamation was issued in 1863.
Freedmen were granted the franchise after the Civil War.
Turner was unanimously nominated to be the Republican candidate from Alabama"s 1st congressional district, which at that point encompassed Southwest Alabama. He was elected as a Republican to the Forty-second Congress (March 4, 1871 - March 3, 1873).
He complained that northern Republicans living in his district had not supported him enough in his run for office. In Congress he worked to restore political and legal rights to Confederates who had fought against the United States in the American Civil War.
He also fought for the repeal of the tax on cotton, on the grounds that it hurt poor African Americans.
In 1872 Turner was nominated again by the Republican Party in the first district. But another African American, Philip Joseph, ran as an independent. Turner was elected in 1880 as a delegate to the Republican National Convention.
After his political career, Turner engaged in agricultural pursuits in Alabama.
He died in Selma, Alabama on March 21, 1894, aged 69. He was interred in Live Oak Cemetery.