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The point of using a grandfather clause was to allow literacy tests to be conducted for voting but not to deny the right to vote for those who's ancestors had the right to vote before the literacy tests were created.
No, they were given the right to vote. ...they were legally allowed to vote but in the south some of the polls would throw their vote away if they were black.
civil rights acts voting rights acts
First of all, the Voting Rights Act was in 1965 NOT 1969. The Voting Rights Act was the law that was passed to ban racial dicrimnation in voting practices by the federal government as well as the state and local goverment.
The Fifteenth Amendment was passed after the Civil War, specifically in 1870. It granted African American men the right to vote and prohibited the denial of voting rights based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude. However, it did not prevent other forms of voter discrimination, such as literacy tests, poll taxes, and intimidation tactics targeted at African American voters.
ok so, it is used to deny voting rights to african amereicans.
That black people couldn't vote.
Before the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and Civil Rights Act of 1964, African Americans had to have numerous qualifications and includes:Poll taxesLiteracy test"grandfather" clauses (for example, if your grandfather was a slave, you couldn't vote)suppressive election proceduresblack codes and enforced segregationbizarre gerrymanderingwhite-only placesPhysical intimidations
Everybody know black people cant vote
how did the grandfather clause effect blacks after the civil war
Amendments made it possible for women and African Americans and other minorities to vote, and the civil rights act made it illegal to impose poll taxes, literacy tests, and grandfather clauses on the voting offices.
The point of using a grandfather clause was to allow literacy tests to be conducted for voting but not to deny the right to vote for those who's ancestors had the right to vote before the literacy tests were created.
The five stages in the history of voting rights include abolished religious qualifications, civil war amendments, women's suffrage, civil rights for black Americans and the rights for young Americans. This took place between 1800s and 1971.
I African Americans do not have temporary voting rights, but have voting rights since 1964 with the Civil Rights Act and the voting rights act. Some states have begun to limit voting rights by adding new laws that require identification checks. Some older people do not have or need the types of identification required and are not allowed to vote.
the black codes were laws passed in the united states to limit the civil rights and civil liberties of african americans
Limit voting to a small portion of African Americans - APEX
There were many examples of disenfranchisement and restrictions placed on African-Americans after the Reconstruction. These included poll taxes, educational requirements, grandfather clauses, the Eight Box Law in South Carolina, property requirements, Jim Crow laws, and White Primaries.