On May 10, 1837, Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback was born near Macon, Georgia. His name may not be taught as often as it should be, but his life belongs in the center of America’s Reconstruction story. Known as P.B.S. Pinchback, he was born free at a time when freedom for Black people in the South could still be fragile, challenged, and dangerous. After his father died, his mother took the family to Ohio to protect their freedom. That decision helped shape the path of a man who would later step into history. During the Civil War, Pinchback served in the Union Army and helped recruit Black soldiers. After the war, he entered politics in Louisiana during Reconstruction, a period when formerly enslaved people and free Black citizens pushed for voting rights, education, public office, and a new kind of power in the South. Pinchback rose through Louisiana politics and became lieutenant governor. Then, in December 1872, after Governor Henry Clay Warmoth was suspended during an impeachment dispute, Pinchback briefly served as acting governor of Louisiana. That made him the first Black person to serve as governor of a U.S. state. His time in office lasted only a few weeks, from December 1872 to January 1873, but the meaning of it was much larger than the length of the term. In a nation still fighting over the future of freedom, a Black man stood at the head of a Southern state government. Pinchback was also elected to the U.S. Senate, but he was never allowed to take his seat. That part of his story says plenty about the promise of Reconstruction and the resistance that worked to limit it. P.B.S. Pinchback’s story is not just a political footnote. It is a reminder that Black leadership after the Civil War was real, powerful, and often deliberately pushed out of the spotlight. Born May 10, 1837. Remember the name. #BlackHistory #OnThisDay #PBSplashback #ReconstructionHistory #NewsBreak