Henry C. Cherry
Henry C. Cherry was an American politician. Born enslaved in North Carolina, he eventually was freed and moved to Edgecombe County where he worked as a carpenter and merchant. He served as a delegate in North Carolina's 1868 constitutional convention and served in the North Carolina House of Representatives from 1868 to 1870.
Early life
Henry C. Cherry was born enslaved in Beaufort County, North Carolina, United States circa 1836. He was a mulatto. Little is known about his early life. By 1860, he was living as a free man in Edgecombe County, North Carolina. He worked as a carpenter and merchant and married Mary Ann Jones, a free woman, in March 1861. He had eight children with her. One of his daughters married U.S. Representative Henry P. Cheatham, another U.S. Representative George Henry White, and a third State Representative Eustace Edward Green.Political career
Cherry was one of 13 black men elected to participate in North Carolina's 1868 constitutional convention. He represented Edgecombe County. He served on the convention's Committee on Suffrage and Eligibility to Office.Cherry was one of 17 colored men elected to the North Carolina House of Representatives in 1868. During his term, he served on the Committee on Penal Institutions. In the second sitting of the 1869 legislature, he served on the Claims Committee and the General Assembly's Joint Committee on Finance. He left office in 1870. He supported efforts to establish the Tarboro Colored Institute for black children in 1869. In 1883, he served on Edgecombe County's board for black public schools.