President Lyndon B. Johnson greeting Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, and other civil rights leaders after signing the Voting Rights Act into law, 1965 (Public Domain) Although the Civil Rights Act of 1964 eliminated all forms of discrimination on the grounds of race, ethnicity, sex, or national origin, it did not fully … Continue reading Dawn of the Voting Rights Act – Voting Rights Act of 1965
Category: American History
Road to the Voting Rights Act – A Century of Civil Rights
Group of “Silent Sentinels” calling for women’s suffrage in front of the White House, 1917 (Public Domain) The passage of the Fifteenth Amendment granted the right to vote to all American men. As the former Confederate states returned to the Union, they rewrote their laws with the intention of disenfranchising the millions of newly-freed African-Americans … Continue reading Road to the Voting Rights Act – A Century of Civil Rights
Road to the Voting Rights Act – Voting Rights from 1789 to 1869
Thomas Kelly print celebrating the Fifteenth Amendment's passage, 1870 (Library of Congress) On August 6, 1965, the Voting Rights Act reinforced the Fifteenth Amendment by declaring that the right to vote was not to be abridged on account of racial identity. While the significance of this landmark piece of legislation is noteworthy, the pursuit for … Continue reading Road to the Voting Rights Act – Voting Rights from 1789 to 1869
New Blog Series: History of the Voting Rights Act
Transcribed first page of Voting Rights Act of 1965 (National Archives) The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library & Museum is pleased to announce a new series of educational blogs! Over the next seven weeks, a collection of research writings covering the history of the Voting Rights Act will be published on our own Reagan Library Education … Continue reading New Blog Series: History of the Voting Rights Act
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