Southern black populations in 1900 Louisiana With a population evenly divided between races, in 1896 there were 130,334 black voters on the Louisiana registration rolls and about the same number of whites. The fusion coalition made impressive gains in the 1896 election when their legislative majority expanded. Republican
Daniel Lindsay Russell won the gubernatorial race in 1897, the first Republican governor of the state since the end of Reconstruction in 1877. The election also resulted in more than 1,000 elected or appointed black officials, including the election in 1897 of
George Henry White to Congress, as a member of the House of Representatives. At the 1898 election, the Democrats ran on
White Supremacy and disfranchisement in a bitter race-baiting campaign led by
Furnifold McLendel Simmons and
Josephus Daniels, editor and publisher of
The Raleigh News & Observer. The Republican/Populist coalition disintegrated, and the Democrats won the North Carolina 1898 election and the following 1900 election. Simmons was elected as the state's US senator in 1900, holding office until 1931 through multiple re-elections by the state legislature and by popular vote after 1920. The Democrats used their power in the state legislature to disenfranchise minorities, primarily blacks, and ensure that Democratic Party and white power would not be threatened again. They passed laws restricting voter registration. In 1900 the Democrats adopted a constitutional suffrage amendment which lengthened the residence period required before registration and enacted both an educational qualification and prepayment of a
poll tax. A
grandfather clause exempted from the poll tax those entitled to vote on January 1, 1867. The growth of the thriving black middle class was slowed. In North Carolina and other Southern states, there were also the insidious effects of invisibility:
Virginia In Virginia, Democrats sought disfranchisement in the late 19th century after a coalition of white and black Republicans with populist Democrats had come to power; the coalition had been formalized as the
Readjuster Party. The Readjuster Party held control from 1881 to 1883, electing a governor and controlling the legislature, which also elected a US Senator from the state. As in North Carolina, state Democrats were able to divide Readjuster supporters through appeals to white supremacy. After regaining power, Democrats changed state laws and the constitution in 1902 to disenfranchise blacks. They ratified the new constitution in the legislature and did not submit it to the popular vote. Voting in Virginia fell by nearly half as a result of the disfranchisement of blacks. This restriction was done by local county laws, but combined with the highly efficacious cumulative
poll tax introduced in 1877 meant that turnout declined steadily throughout the 1880s, unlike any other former Confederate state except South Carolina. However, politics after the first demobilization was always chaotic. Third-party movements, chiefly the
Populist Party, gained support amongst the remaining poor white and black voters in opposition to
the planter elite. Whereas the Republican Party had not contested a statewide election seriously since 1876, the Populists made a significant run for governor in 1892 as they launched the most significant third-party campaign since
John Bell in the sectionally divided 1860 election. In Georgia, the Populists were led by
Thomas E. Watson, who had won a seat in Congress in 1890. The Populist political maneuvering, combined with past alliances of Republicans with the Populist movement, had the effect of increasing Georgia's Republican vote in
1896 to the highest level seen in any presidential election since
1872 at the height of Reconstruction. The aim of co-opting the Populists led Georgia to become the last former Confederate state to initiate a full-scale disenfranchisement plan to largely eliminate the seventy thousand or so blacks who remained on the rolls. The process, involving a literacy test and a grandfather clause in addition to the poll tax, alongside statewide white primaries, was achieved in the next presidential election year, when a transformed Watson ran for the Populist Party on a white supremacist campaign. At the same time the Republican Party aimed to make gains in the South because of opposition by developing manufacturers to
William Jennings Bryan's populism, and by nominee
William Howard Taft's willingness to accept black disfranchisement.
Texas In Texas, gubernatorial elections were fairly competitive in the 1890s with a fusion of the Populist and Republican parties, though the state likely would have remained a Democratic stronghold even without disfranchisement. Until
voting against Catholic Al Smith in 1928, Texas had never voted Republican for president even during Reconstruction. The
Terrell Election Law created a poll tax that, from 1902, disenfranchised virtually all remaining African-American voters, the vast majority of Mexican Americans, and also most poor whites. Voter turnout among males over twenty-one fell from over eighty percent to under thirty percent following the enactment of the poll tax.
The population share of African Americans in Texas was 31% in 1870, but this steadily declined to 20.4% in 1900, 14.7% in 1930, and 12.4% in 1960.
Oklahoma Oklahoma was unique, as it only
became a state in 1907. During the
American Civil War, most of what is now the U.S. state of Oklahoma was designated as the
Indian Territory. Most tribal leaders in Indian Territory aligned with the Confederacy. Oklahoma disenfranchised its black population, which comprised less than 10% of the state's total, from 1910 to 1960. Nevertheless, it is estimated that by 1940 Oklahoma had from this relatively small population as many registered black voters as Tennessee, North Carolina or Virginia. In
Guinn v. United States (1915), the Supreme Court invalidated the
Constitution's "old soldier" and "grandfather clause" exemptions from literacy tests. In practice, these had disenfranchised blacks, as had occurred in numerous Southern states. This decision affected similar provisions in the constitutions of Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina, and Virginia election rules. Oklahoma and other states quickly reacted by passing laws that created other rules for voter registration that worked against blacks and minorities. Oklahoma did not have a Republican governor until
Henry Bellmon was elected in
1962, though Republicans were still able to draw over 40% of the vote statewide during the Jim Crow era. However, Oklahoma was still politically competitive at the federal level during the Jim Crow era. It voted for
Warren G. Harding in
1920 and
Herbert Hoover in
1928. Oklahoma did not enact a
poll tax found in the former Confederate states, and had a Republican presence in
Northwestern Oklahoma with close ties to neighboring
Kansas, a Republican stronghold. Oklahoma also elected three Republican senators in the Jim Crow era:
John W. Harreld (1921–1927),
William B. Pine (1925–1931), and
Edward H. Moore (1943–1949). Starting in
1952, well before the 1965 Voting Rights Act, Oklahoma has consistently voted Republican in presidential elections, except in
Lyndon B. Johnson's
1964 landslide. Oklahoma is the only Southern state to have never voted for a Democratic presidential candidate after 1964. ==Border states: failed disfranchisement==