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NGE >> History and Archaeology >> Progressive Era to World War II, 1900-1945 >> People >> Alonzo Herndon (1858-1927) |
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Alonzo Herndon (1858-1927) An African American barber and entrepreneur, Alonzo Herndon was founder and president of the Atlanta Life Insurance Company, one of the most successful black-owned insurance businesses in the nation. At the time of his death in 1927, he was also Atlanta's wealthiest black citizen, owning more property than any other African American. Admired and respected by many, he was noted for his involvement in and support of local institutions and charities devoted to advancing African American business and community life. Early Years Born into slavery in Walton County on June 26, 1858, Alonzo Franklin Herndon
In 1878 Herndon left Social Circle on foot, with eleven dollars of savings and about a year of schooling. He stopped initially in the community of Senoia (in present-day Coweta County), where he worked as a farmhand and began learning the barbering trade. After a few months Herndon migrated to the town of Jonesboro, in Clayton County. Here he opened his first barbershop. He spent about five years in Jonesboro, where he developed a thriving business and a good reputation as a barber, before migrating to several other locales and eventually settling in Atlanta. Arriving in early 1883, he secured employment as a barber in a shop on Marietta Street owned by William Dougherty Hutchins, an African American. After six months Herndon purchased half interest in the shop, entering into a partnership with one of the few free blacks operating barbering establishments since before the Civil War. Business Success Herndon's barbering
As his personal fortune grew, Herndon entered the field of insurance. In 1905 he purchased a failing mutual aid association, which he incorporated as the Atlanta Mutual Insurance Association. With Herndon playing a pivotal role as president and chief stockholder, the small association expanded its assets from $5,000 in 1905 to more than $400,000 by 1922. In 1922 the company was reorganized as the Atlanta Life Insurance Company and achieved legal reserve status, a position enjoyed by only four other black insurance companies at that time. The firm grew rapidly in the 1920s, expanding its operations
Leadership and Community Involvement Herndon's wealth
It was on the local level, however, that he maintained his most vigorous involvements. He gave generous support and resources to such local institutions and causes as the YMCA; Atlanta University; the Leonard Street, Carrie Steele, and Diana Pace orphanages; the Herndon Day Nursery; and the First Congregational Church. He also supported commercial activities, including the Southview Cemetery Association and the Atlanta State Savings Bank. Herndon's prominence and influence were enhanced by his family life. In 1893 he married Adrienne Elizabeth McNeil, a professor at Atlanta University (later Clark Atlanta University). McNeil had studied dramatic arts in Boston and New York, receiving
Herndon died in Atlanta on July 21, 1927, a few weeks after his sixty-ninth birthday. Overcoming poverty and illiteracy, he had risen in his lifetime from slavery to become the wealthy head of a leading black enterprise that has survived into the twenty-first century and is consistently listed among the top black financial companies as ranked by Black Enterprise magazine. Suggested Reading Alexa Benson Henderson, "Alonzo Herndon and Black Insurance in Atlanta, 1904-1915" Atlanta Historical Bulletin 21 (spring 1977). Alexa Benson Henderson, Atlanta Life Insurance Company: Guardian of Black Economic Dignity (Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1990). Carole Merritt, The Herndons: An Atlanta Family (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2002). Alexa Benson Henderson, Clark Atlanta University Published 9/20/2004 |
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