Early involvement Lewis Hayden helped bring Chappelle into the Republican Party and started him out giving him the task to register people to vote. Chappelle was quite successful at it, and was known for his neat appearance as he also learned the barber's trade when in
Chelsea, Massachusetts. Newspapers described Chappelle as having a brisk walk and as being well spoken. Boston's
Sunday Herald in 1886 that Chappelle was thought of as an "
Adonis" by the African-American community.
Massachusetts General Court In the early 1880s, he was nominated as a
Republican candidate for the state legislature from Boston's Ninth Ward, including the
Beacon Hill area, and was elected for four terms from 1883 to 1886. He became one of the early prominent African-American legislators. The Ninth Ward was also called the
Ninth Suffolk district and was composed of 2,800 voters in 1886.
The Boston Globe described the Ward as extremely diverse both ethnically and economically: "There is not another ward in the whole town that so completely embraces all the grades of society. On the voting lists of one precinct are few voting names that do not bear the Celtic stamp, while another precinct is composed entirely of colored men. Then there is the precinct where the voters are mostly of the middle walk, where still in another the most pretentious people of Boston are still in control." Upon his election, Republican legislators tried to prevent Chappelle from having an actual chair in the General Court by pinning the name of a white Republican on his chair, forcing Chappelle to find another "out-of the way" chair to sit in. Though this incident was not without precedent, it was considered a mark of hypocrisy by the otherwise pro-black Republican Party. The next day, the Republican caucus issued a statement denouncing the story and claiming it was the prerogative of Chappelle's defeated opponent to bequeath his chair to whom he chose. In the House, Chappelle served on committees for the "Federal relations and engrossed bill," and "Public Land and State House." Chappelle staunchly supported expanding the federal
Civil Rights Act of 1866 to prohibit race discrimination in public settings, stating "It is on the principle of rights that belong to us that we want this bill passed and public places thrown open." He promoted African-American civil rights, and worked on
consumer affairs issues.
Elections 1882 When Chappelle was nominated to the
Massachusetts General Court, he was opposed by other African-American candidates. An elected African-American secretary in his own party said that he had been elected by fraud. The charges against Chappelle were proven untrue with a recount of two times. The
New York Globe wrote, "Chappelle will, in the opinion of many white and colored voters, be elected in spite of such mean tricks." In 1882, Chappelle succeeded John F. Andrew (son of Governor
John Albion Andrew) and defeated Democrat
Brooks Adams (great-grandson of President
John Adams).
1884 recount In 1884, Chappelle narrowly defeated Democrat Charles Albert Prince, son of Boston Mayor
Frederick O. Prince, in a highly contested election. The original count was 831 votes for Julius C. Chappelle and 800 for Prince. However, a recount was "done in a "hurried manner by the Board of Alderman" without Chappelle's knowledge or presence, and it showed 730 votes for Chappelle and 815 votes for Prince.
1885 In 1885, the
Daily Globe reported "Julius C. Chappelle, who enjoys immensely that distinction of being the first colored man to sit for so long a period on Beacon Hill" where the staunch Republican Chappelle was mentioned within a column devoted mainly to Democrats. Chappelle's new running mate
Henry Parkman did not strongly support his re-election, but Chappelle was re-elected regardless, defeating Robert Hooper, the son of Congressman
Samuel Hooper.
Republican State Committee Chappelle served three one-year terms on the state committee of the Massachusetts Republican Party, representing Boston's Fifth Ward from 1889. In his third term the president of the state committee in Boston, Massachusetts and was the first African-American in this position. He was active in the
Massachusetts State House politics of that time. Chappelle also served as an alternate delegate to the 1884 Republican National Convention in
Chicago. == Post-legislative career ==