Saturday, September 8, 2007

Exposing Jim Crow

The first African American to serve in the Tennessee General Assembly was Sampson Keeble, elected to a two-year term beginning in 1873. During the following term, to which Keeble was not re-elected, the state legislature passed the first of Tennessee's so-called "Jim Crow" laws, permitting discrimination in railroad trains, restaurants, and other public facilities. The bill as enacted was written imprecisely enough that it did not draw the critical attention of the U.S. Congress, whose Reconstruction laws restricted this type of injustice. However, House Bill 527 as originally submitted made sponsor R. P. Cole's objectives perfectly clear -- he intended to ban blacks from using any public facilities enjoyed by whites.

As the bill moved through the state legislature, passing both its first and second readings, it was referred to the Judiciary Committee for their recommendations and approval. The committee members removed all specific references to African Americans (including ludicrous and malicious references to the kink of the hair, bodily contours and odors, and descendance from "canibals"), while admittedly supporting the author's intent in every way. They reworded the bill, crafting its final, ambiguous language and submitted it to the General Assembly, where it received final approval and passed into law, as Chapter 130, Acts of Tennessee, 1875.

More information about the bill and about the first black legislators in Tennessee can be found on the Tennessee State Library and Archives (TSLA) website. The following links will beam you to some of the most interesting sections of the site:

http://www.state.tn.us/tsla/
(This is the main page of the TSLA website, with links to many of the features the Tennessee State Library and Archives has made available online.)

http://www.state.tn.us/tsla/exhibits/blackhistory/index.htm
(This is the main page of "This Honorable Body: African American Legislators in 19th Century Tennessee," with links to the other sections of this exhibit. Be sure to turn the sound on -- you will hear a song by the Fisk Jubilee singers on this page.)

http://www.state.tn.us/tsla/exhibits/blackhistory/bios/boyd.htm
(Scroll down this biography page to the last paragraph, where you will find a direct link to a PDF file of a recent transcription of Chapter 130.)

http://www.state.tn.us/tsla/exhibits/blackhistory/timelines/timeline.htm
(On the first page of the timeline is a link in the upper right corner to a PDF file of a much more complete timeline, which includes the transcribed texts of many of the documents mentioned, including the Emancipation Proclamation; the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments; the Wade-Davis bill; the Civil Rights acts of 1866 and 1875; and Chapter 130, along with many more.)

http://www.state.tn.us/tsla/exhibits/blackhistory/resources.htm
(This page gives you access to a down-loadable PowerPoint presentation about the first African American legislators in Tennessee.)

http://tsla-teva.state.tn.us/
(While you're on the TSLA website, don't miss this exciting new feature. TeVA, the Tennessee Virtual Archive, is TSLA's rapidly-growing online digital collection, featuring historical documents, maps, photographs, and much more. TeVA can make valuable historical materials available to teachers, students, and researchers who cannot easily make the trip to Nashville to visit the library. We expect that this site will continue to grow for many years, making more and more primary resources available to the public.)

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Wow. Good thing we're too enlightened to pass laws like that now. Oh wait.... keep immigrant children out of public schools, ban same-sex marriage, racial profiling, the Patriot Act.... Forget I said anything.