Tag Page VotingRightsHistory

#VotingRightsHistory
LataraSpeaksTruth

On March 2, 1877, Congress finished counting the electoral votes from the disputed 1876 presidential election and certified Rutherford B. Hayes as president over Samuel J. Tilden by a single electoral vote, 185 to 184. That outcome did not happen on its own. In late January 1877, Congress created a special Electoral Commission to decide the contested electoral votes from several states. The Commission’s rulings were then accepted during the final count on March 2. In the weeks that followed, Democrats ended their resistance to Hayes taking office and Republicans moved toward a set of understandings that later became known as the Compromise of 1877. It was not one signed document. It was political bargaining, and the biggest consequence was federal enforcement in the South being scaled back. After Hayes was inaugurated on March 5, 1877, the remaining federal troops stationed at Southern statehouses were withdrawn, commonly dated to April 1877. With that protection gone, the last Reconstruction governments in places like Louisiana and South Carolina collapsed. In plain language, this meant people who had gained political influence after the Civil War, especially formerly enslaved people and African Americans, were left with far less federal protection at the ballot box and in public life. White supremacist intimidation and organized violence became easier to carry out. Over time, state governments built stronger systems of segregation and voter suppression through laws, procedures, and local enforcement. So yes, the core takeaway is correct. March 2 marks the certification that cleared the way. The troop withdrawal that helped end Reconstruction followed soon after. #OnThisDay #March2 #1877 #Reconstruction #CompromiseOf1877 #Hayes #Tilden #ElectoralCount #ElectoralCommission #USHistory #AmericanHistory #SouthernHistory #VotingRightsHistory

LataraSpeaksTruth

James Reeb was a white Unitarian Universalist minister from Boston who answered Dr. King’s call after Bloody Sunday in Selma in March 1965. He didn’t have to go. Nobody forced him. He chose to show up anyway, knowing exactly how violent Alabama was toward civil rights workers at that moment. On March 9, 1965, after leaving a restaurant with two other ministers, Reeb was attacked by white segregationists armed with clubs. He was struck in the head, collapsed, and died two days later on March 11. He was 38 years old. Here’s the part people like to gloss over. His murder wasn’t accidental. It wasn’t random. It was targeted racial terror meant to send a message. And the response to his death tells you everything. Hospitals initially refused to treat him properly. The men charged with his murder were acquitted by an all-white jury. No justice. Just like that. Reeb’s death shocked the nation precisely because he was white. That’s uncomfortable, but it’s true. His killing helped push public pressure that led directly to the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Not because his life mattered more, but because America suddenly paid attention when the violence crossed a line it had been ignoring for centuries. So when people try to argue that white allies didn’t sacrifice anything, James Reeb stands right there in the historical record saying otherwise. Sacrifice doesn’t require shared oppression to be real. It requires choice, risk, and consequence. He chose to stand where hatred was loud, and it cost him his life. #JamesReeb #Selma1965 #VotingRightsHistory #CivilRightsMovement #FreedomStruggle #HistoryMatters #UntoldHistory #RememberSelma

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