Grandfather clauses, which were originally intended to prevent black people from voting, were named for provisions adopted by the constitutions of some states. Such amendments sought to interfere with an individual's right to vote by setting forth difficult requirements.
For example, common requirements were ownership of a large amount of land or the ability to read and write portions of the state and federal constitutions. The name grandfather clause arose from the exceptions that were made for veterans of the Civil War. If the veterans were qualified to vote prior to 1866, their descendants were also qualified. Thus, in effect, if a person's grandfather could vote, he could vote without further restrictions.
These statutes accomplished exactly what was intended, since nearly all slaves and their descendants were disqualified from voting because they could not satisfy the statutory requirements.
was an eligible voter.
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
Grandfather clauses required all voters to prove that their grandparents had voted for them to be able to exercise the right to vote. This effectively prevented African-Americans from voting since their grandparents were usually slaves.
A couple ways that Southern States kept African Americans from voting, despite the 15th Amendment, would be the Grandfather Clause, fixed literacy test, and poll fees/ taxes. The Grandfather Clause was a law that stated that you could not vote if your family couldn't vote prier to 1866. Poll fees/ taxes wasn't the best idea considering that African Americans weren't the only poor people in America. Some whites were also poor so that allowed them not to vote. And the fixed literacy test was a test question that everyone was asked before they could vote where and they would be fixed where African Americans couldn't vote. They would have stupid questions like "Spell it, backwards" and the correcter could either say to spell IT backwards or to spell BACKWARDS. For an African American, the answer would always be wrong because the correcter would mark it as the other one so they always got it wrong and couldn't vote. There are a couple more ways that Southerners kept African Americans from voting but these are the only couple ones that I know/ was taught.
A male of 18 years old. No slaves or immigrants were allowed to vote.
1955
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
The couldn't vote if their grandfather had not allowed to vote
The couldn't vote if their grandfather had not allowed to vote
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
They could not vote if their grandfather had not been allowed to vote.
Some of the restrictions on voting rights were literacy tests(being able to read and write), poll taxes(paying a fine to vote), and the grandfather clause(you can only vote if your grandfather voted).
The grandfather clause existed in the southern United States, specifically in states that implemented discriminatory voting restrictions against African Americans after the Reconstruction period. It allowed individuals to vote if their ancestors had been eligible to vote before the Civil War, effectively disenfranchising African Americans.
I think you misunderstand the term "grandfather clause ". It was a statute enacted by the southern states in reconstruction that allowed potential white voters to bypass literacy tests, poll taxes, and other things to stop African Americans from voting. It had nothing to do with family lines.