Despite end of Civil War, the three great Reconstruction Amendments (13th, 14th, 15th) to the U.S. Constitution, the three federal Enforcement Acts of 1870 and 1871, Virginia will effectively disenfranchise most of its Black population after the withdrawal of Federal troops from the South in the last 1870's.
Prior to readmission to the Union, each state had to hold an election for a constitutional convention open to all males twenty-one years and older residing in the state for at least a year, excluding persons disenfranchised for participating in rebellion or convicted of common law felonies; adopt a constitution extending the franchise to those same voters ratified by voters and submitted to Congress for approval; and ratify the Enforcement Act of 1870.
General John Schofield, the Military Governor of Virginia, ordered a referendum to elect delegates to a constitutional convention on October 22, 1867, for which 105,832 freedmen registered to vote and 93,145 voted. Of the 104 delegates, 68—including 24 Black delegates—were Republicans who favored full political and social equality for formerly enslaved Black people and exclusion of ex-Confederates from voting and holding office. On July 6, 1869, Virginia voters ratified the new constitution, rejecting two clauses that disfranchised and barred supporters of the former Confederacy from holding public office. The result was the
Underwood Constitution.
1869: The Underwood Constitution: Expands Voting Rights in Virginia
see also: Remaking Virginia,...
The 1869 Constitution is also called the Underwood Convention, after its president, Radical Republican federal judge John C. Underwood. The new constitution significantly expanded voting rights but proposals to declare voting a natural right and expand suffrage to women failed during the convention.
The Underwood Constitution:
- Extended suffrage to every male citizen twenty-one years and older residing in Virginia for at least a year and in the locality in which he wished to vote for at least three months, excluding
- (1) “idiot and lunatics”
- (2) persons convicted of bribery in any election, embezzlement of public funds, treason, or felony
- (3) any Virginia citizen who, after adoption of the constitution, fought, sent, or accepted a challenge to fight, knowingly conveyed a challenge, or aided or assisted in any way a duel with a deadly weapon.
- Guaranteed voting by ballot.
- Created an article on local government for the first time, the new constitution established the board of supervisors form of county government and authorized the popular election of a large number of local officials.
- Renamed the Declaration of Rights as the Bill of Rights in Article I, the new constitution added provisions that renounced the right of secession; recognized the supremacy of the United States Constitution and the laws and treaties enacted thereunder; abolished slavery and involuntary servitude “except as lawful imprisonment may constitute such;” and declared all citizens of the state “to possess equal civil and political rights and public privileges."
Readmitted to the Union: January 26, 1870
Virginia readmitted to the Union (1/26/1870) and to representation in Congress with the conditions that:
(1) Its constitution would never be amended to deprive any U.S. citizen or class of citizens of the right to vote except as a punishment for convicted of felonies under state law (provided that amendments could be made regarding the length of time and place of voters’ residences);
(2) It would never deprive any U.S. citizen, on account of his race, color, or previous condition of servitude, of the right to hold office under state law or require any conditions not required of other citizens,
(3) Its constitution would never be amended to deprive any U.S. citizen or class of citizens of the school rights and privileges secured by its constitution.