Earl W. Mann (June 8, 1886 – 1969) was a state legislator and columnist in Colorado.
He served in the U.S. Army during World War I and was badly injured by poison gas.
He was first elected to the Colorado House of Representatives in 1942 and served five consecutive terms.
His columns expressed opposition to lynching and disbelief that legislation to make it a federal crime failed.
His February 19, 1944 column stated the act was "fascism appearing in a new suit of clothes, without bathing, permitting the noxious body odors to disclose its identity, and its subtle purpose: Japanese and then Negroes and Jews.