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![]() Between 1866 and 1875, Congress passed several civil rights acts to enforce the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, allowing the federal government to impose heavy penalties for violations. The Civil Rights Act of 1866: This act granted black citizens equal rights to contract, to sue and be sued, to marry, travel, and own property. It made all citizens subject to "like punishment, pains and penalties." Any person guilty of depriving citizens of their stated rights because of race, color, or previous condition of servitude could be fined, imprisoned or both. The Reconstruction Act of 1867: This act allowed former slaves to participate fully in the political arena. As a result, African Americans sat in constitutional conventions, helped draft state constitutions, and supported new comprehensive programs for state education in the South. The Enforcement Act of 1870: This act stated that all citizens otherwise qualified to vote in any election should not be denied the vote because of race. States could set up prerequisites for voting, but all persons were to have equal access to the vote. The Civil Rights Act of 1871: This act set up a system of federal supervision of elections within the states in order to stop illegal voter registration practices.
The Civil Rights Act of 1875: This act entitled all persons the "full and
equal enjoyment" of public accommodations, such as hotels, transportation or
theaters. It granted blacks the right to sue for personal damages, and allowed
any qualified person to serve as a juror. This was the last piece of civil
rights legislation passed by the United States Congress until 1957.
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Voices of Struggle The Civil War Freedom At Last Civil Rights Acts Migration Jim Crow Laws Education Booker T Washington Philanthropists Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka Little Rock Montgomery Bus Boycott Students Sit-Ins Freedom Rides Project C Birmingham The March on Washington People of Memphis Rooms 306 & 307 Exploring the Legacy |
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