The Law and Politics
At same time we were educating ourselves, building our schools and institutes of higher learning, we also knew we had to be part of the decision making process.
So we entered the political arena and we were very successful!
During the Reconstruction era (1865–1877), over 85 African American men were elected to the Virginia General Assembly, serving in both the House of Delegates and the Senate. These lawmakers played a critical role in shaping post-Civil War Virginia, advocating for public education, civil rights, and political equality.
These men were part of a broader movement: over 1,500 African Americans held public office across the South during Reconstruction, with Virginia being one of the states with the most sustained Black political participation.
African American legislators in Virginia were primarily members of the Republican Party, which supported civil rights and Reconstruction policies.
The Readjuster Party was a bi-racial, cross-class political coalition formed in Virginia in the late 1870’s during the Reconstruction era, primarily in response to the state’s massive pre-Civil War debt—over $45 million—accrued from infrastructure projects like railroads and canals. The party sought to “readjust” the debt by reducing the principal and interest rates, arguing that full repayment would drain state funds from essential public services, especially public education.
Their political influence declined by the 1890’s due to Democratic Party resurgence, voter suppression, and the 1902 state constitution that effectively disenfranchised Black voters.
Black political participation in Virginia declined after the 1890s due to Democratic Party reassertion, voter suppression, and the 1902 state constitution that disenfranchised most Black voters. Despite this, African Americans continued to hold local offices into the 20th century, and the legacy of Reconstruction-era leadership persisted in Virginia’s political history.
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