Concerns over African American disenfranchisement

22 June 1901

 

View the letter from Giles B. Jackson to R. C. Burrow in the resource

Written on 22 June 1901, Giles Jackson of Virginia’s Negro Business League constructed a letter to the Commissioner of Revenue of Virginia. In this letter, Jackson requested information on Black businessmen in Virginia, asking for ‘the names and as near as you can the post-office addresses of all the colored people engaged in business [and] how much the colored people pay to the way of taxes on deeds’. It was with this information that the organisation hoped to conclude which African Americans would be qualified to vote under the proposed constitution. An appeal would then be made to the convention not to limit Black suffrage.

This letter was written in response to a constitutional convention to draft election reforms which, without violating the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, aimed to disenfranchise African Americans. In order to achieve this, delegates considered poll taxes and literacy tests as requirements for voting. The convention was fervently supported by the Democrats who added to previous efforts and aimed to achieve widespread disenfranchisement by law. Indeed, between 1873 and 1883, a series of decisions made by the U.S. Supreme Court set back former federal efforts to protect the civil rights of African Americans.

1896 saw the Supreme Court sanction legal separation of the races in its ruling in the case of Plessy v. Ferguson, which triggered renewed enthusiasm for the propagation of ‘Negro inferiority’. While previously guaranteed protection until 1957, African Americans in the south now found themselves exposed to groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, who reinforced white supremacy by beating, lynching and burning homes. Racial violence again reigned over the U.S., manifesting itself in race riots, the worst of which took place in Springfield, Illinois, in the year of 1908.

The implications of disenfranchisement were far reaching. The Republican Party faced near elimination in the region, while Southern Democrats managed to establish a one-party system which exercised extensive legislative power. In Congress, the Democratic South also gained nearly 25 extra seats between 1903 and 1953, while due to the lack of a two-party system southern Senators and Representatives enjoyed leadership of the national Democratic Party. Further problems occurred during the Great Depression, when social programs established by legislation caused gaps in coverage due to the absence of African American representation. Only in the 1960s, following the passage of federal civil rights legislation, did disenfranchisement finally come to an end.

 

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