After the
Civil War and the
emancipation of
enslaved people, Hyman returned to North Carolina in 1865. Democrats in the legislature had established the district to try to reduce black influence in politics in other parts of the state, as this was a black-majority area. The freedmen and previously free blacks elected all but two Republican representatives for the next quarter century. Hyman served for one term (March 4, 1875 – March 3, 1877). After unsuccessfully running for the Republican renomination to Congress in 1876 and losing to
Curtis Brogden, the immediate past governor, Hyman returned to agricultural pursuits. Hyman was appointed as special deputy collector of internal revenue for the fourth district of North Carolina from July 1, 1877 to June 30, 1878. He moved to
Washington, D.C., after being accused of misappropriating church funds. He worked for the
United States Post Office Department and for the
United States Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C. == Legacy and honors ==