In 1877, the federal occupation ended, with profound consequences for African Americans and for the
Florida Republican Party. Blacks were systematically disenfranchised, and Florida would not see another Republican governor until
Claude R. Kirk, Jr. in 1967. Democrats regained control of the legislature. Black Republicans, including Wallace, became increasingly disillusioned. Wallace helped lead the Florida independent movement, and ran unsuccessfully as an Independent in the 1882 race for the state senate. In 1884, he supported Independent
Frank Pope in the gubernatorial race with great optimism, but Black and liberal white voters were no longer strong enough to win elections in Florida. Wallace again ran for the Senate, but finished thirteenth. He was appointed a Customs House inspector in Key West for $2 per day, but was replaced in 1885, following the election of U.S. President
Grover Cleveland. He left Key West and opened a law practice in Jacksonville. He argued a number of cases before the
Florida Supreme Court.
Carpet-Bag Rule in Florida was published in 1888, just before the election of that year. The book portrays the Republican Party as abusing, for political ends, the allegedly misplaced trust of Blacks, whose true friends, according to the book, were the Democrats. Questions have been raised as to whether Wallace actually authored the book, and whether it was written instead by Wallace's old mentor, Bloxham. Critics feel that whoever wrote it, it was heavily influenced by and advantageous to Bloxham. Certainly Wallace had been embittered by his experiences as a Republican, and the book captured those sentiments. Hailed as a vigorous exposé after publication, in more recent years its authority and authenticity have come under doubt. The book had little effect on Wallace. He continued to practice law and eschewed politics. Between 1891 and 1904, he won four of eleven appeals before the Florida Supreme Court. Wallace died on November 25, 1908, in Jacksonville, at the age of sixty-three. ==References==