After the war, Rivers returned to the Edgefield District, eventually settling on a farm outside
Hamburg, which became a black-majority town in this period, with a thriving community. He entered the
Republican Party and became active in state politics. He had reportedly learned to read and write while a slave, and proved to be a skilled orator and essayist. He served as registrar for
Edgefield County in 1867. In the South Carolina Constitutional Convention of 1868, he was the delegate from Edgefield. He was elected as a state legislator and later as a trial judge, and was deeply involved with Reconstruction politics. Rivers was one of three African-American founders of Aiken County, established by the state legislature in 1871 during Reconstruction, and he helped pick the site for the county courthouse. After a redistricting in 1872, Rivers was the state representative from the newly organized Aiken County. He later served as mayor, county coroner and justice of the peace, all local offices newly available to black candidates. After the trial, Rivers' home was burned and property stolen or destroyed by Red Shirts. Violence continued in the following weeks as the white militia worked to suppress black voting in the Upland counties, with a massacre of an estimated 30-100 blacks over several days in September in
Ellenton. The Democrats regained control of the state legislature and governor's office in 1876, in an election marked by fraud. It was settled in a national compromise by which the Republican administration agreed to withdraw federal troops from the South, officially ending Reconstruction. In South Carolina, white Democrats passed laws to impose segregation and "
Jim Crow", and continued violence at elections, but African-American
George Henry White was elected to US Congress in the 1890s. In 1895 the Democrats passed a new constitution that included requirements that effectively
disfranchised blacks in the state. After the rise of whites and imposition of
white supremacy, Rivers worked as a house painter and coachman until his death at age 65. ==References==