In 1892, he ran unsuccessfully for the
North Carolina Senate but was later elected for six terms in the
United States House of Representatives, from 1897 to 1909. In 1898, he helped lead the
Wilmington insurrection of 1898, a violent coup d'état by a group of white supremacists. They expelled opposition black and white political leaders from the city, destroyed the property and businesses of black citizens built up since the Civil War, including the only black newspaper in the city, and killed an estimated 60 to more than 300 people. With other members of his family, he was an active participant in leading to the approval of a state constitutional amendment in 1900 placing numerous limitations on the right of black
Tar Heels to vote. In January, 1901,
George Henry White, an African-American, included Kitchin in his Congressional farewell address. He said that no politician had done more to bring the African-American into disrepute. White also said that Kitchin attempted to disprove African-Americans were worthy of the
Fourteenth Amendment. In 1906 Kitchin proposed an amendment to the
Post Office Department's appropriations bill to end the $167,000 subsidy paid to
Southern Railway funding the
Fast Mail service, which served his constituency directly and was the last fast mail train in the United States that received such a subsidy. The train was discontinued on January 1, 1907, as a result, and Kitchin's amendment was later used as a campaign issue against him. Limited to one term as governor by the state constitution of the time, Kitchin ran unsuccessfully for the United States Senate in 1912. His tenure as governor was highly productive: he increased expenditures for public education and public health services, oversaw expansion of railroads and increased stability of the state's banks, and presided over other reforms. After completing his term, Governor Kitchin practiced law in
Raleigh, NC until 1919, when his declining health led him to retire to his home in
Scotland Neck, NC. He died in 1924 and is buried in the Scotland Neck Baptist Cemetery. ==References==