When the
American Civil War broke out, Turner enlisted in the
Union Army and served as body servant for Col.
Madison Miller. He was wounded, resulting in a permanent limp. After the war, Miller's brother-in-law, Missouri Governor
Thomas Fletcher, appointed him as assistant superintendent of schools. He had funding from a private religious group, the
American Missionary Association based in New England, as well as the War Department's
Freedmen's Bureau. He was responsible for setting up 32 schools for black Missourians. He helped establish the
Lincoln Institute in Jefferson City, the first institution of higher education for African Americans in the state. The institute's name was later changed to
Lincoln University. As a politician, Turner, an outspoken member of the
Radical Republicans and a leader of the Missouri Equal Rights League, was held in high regard for his oratorical skills. In 1868 he was installed as the principal of
Lincoln School, the first school for blacks in
Kansas City, Missouri. He was succeeded by
J. Dallas Bowser. In 1871, Turner was appointed as consul general to
Liberia by Republican President
Ulysses S. Grant. He relocated to
Monrovia and held that post until 1878. During this time he was involved in settling the
Grebo war. When he returned to St. Louis, Turner played an important role in helping to resettle black refugees from former
Confederate states in
the South. He also worked to organize freedmen and people of color free before the Civil War as a political force; they overwhelmingly joined the
Republican Party, considered the party of
Abraham Lincoln. Turner also took part in relief efforts for African Americans who had left the South for
Kansas as part of the
Exoduster Movement of 1879. Many of these migrants settled in St. Louis. Turner worked during the last two decades of his life in fighting for the rights of Cherokee, Choctaw, and Chickasaw
Freedmen in the Indian Territory. After the war, the US government had made new treaties with these tribes, which had supported the Confederacy. They required the tribes to offer full citizenship to those Freedmen who chose to stay in tribal territory, as the US had done for Freedmen in the United States. He successfully lobbied Congress for the nearly 4,000
Cherokee Freedmen to receive $75,000 (US$ in ) from funds that the U.S. government had paid the tribe in 1888 for their land. The Cherokee originally did not want to divide the money for communal lands to include the Freedmen. == Death and legacy ==