[April 9th
marks the 150th anniversary of the landmark Civil
Rights Act of 1866, one of many such Reconstruction
sesquicentennials over the next decade. So this week I’ve AmericanStudied
five Reconstruction histories, leading up to this special weekend post on the
Civil Rights Act itself.]
Why we don’t
remember a controversial law, and a couple reasons why we should.
There are many
factors that contribute to the thoroughgoing absence of the Civil Rights Act
of 1866 from our collective national memories. For one thing, as I hope
this week’s series has made plain, there’s a long list of Reconstruction
moments and histories that we don’t remember well; indeed, given the
mythologized Dunning
School narrative of Reconstruction history against which Du Bois was
writing and which as I noted Friday has significantly
endured into our own moment, it’s fair to ask whether we remember anything
about Reconstruction with accuracy or clarity. More specifically, there was a
good deal of debate surrounding the 1866 law about whether Congress had the
power to grant civil or Constitutional rights at all; not coincidentally, some
of the same language from the law had already made its way into the proposed
14th Amendment, and when that amendment was ratified two years
later it was widely seen as incorporating the Civil Rights Act (a link made
explicit by the subsequent Enforcement
Acts of 1870 and 1871).
So the Civil
Rights Act of 1866 didn’t stand alone, and has to be contextualized in
relationship to the 14th Amendment (and the 15th,
for that matter), among other Reconstruction laws and debates. At the same
time, I would make precisely the opposite point—that there are provisions and
elements of the Civil Rights Act that are not part of or complement the
amendments, and without which our understanding of those amendments is likewise
incomplete. To name one particularly significant such element, the Civil Rights
Act’s protections of all American workers from racial, ethnic, or other
discriminatory practices is widely considered the nation’s
first anti-discrimination employment statute, and as such represented a
vital step not only in Reconstruction and racial histories but in the similarly
evolving late 19th century histories of labor and government
regulation. In Thursday’s post, I noted that toward the end of his presidency Andrew
Johnson supported (and then early in his own presidency Ulysses S. Grant signed)
a proclamation endorsing the 8-hour work day, another reflection of the complex
but unmistakable intersections between Reconstruction and labor issues and activism.
And those intersections truly began with the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which
helps us remember the parallel, longstanding links between race and work in
American politics and society.
While Andrew
Johnson endorsed the 8-hour proclamation, however, he most definitely did not
support the Civil Rights Act; indeed, he vetoed its first iteration in 1865 and
then vetoed
the 1866 version as well, but the House of Representatives overrode
that second veto to pass the bill into law. Given that the House would vote
to impeach Johnson a couple years later, this opposition or division between
the branches might seem both unsurprising and not worth remarking upon. But I
would argue the opposite—that while it might otherwise be possible to see
Johnson’s impeachment as a political battle or clash between Washington agendas
or the like, the dispute over the Civil Rights Act illustrates instead just how
socially and culturally significant were the Radical Republicans’ disagreements
with Johnson and his policies. One of the biggest problems with the
mythologized narrative of the period is that it generally attributes
Reconstruction’s failures to federal overreach and radicalism—whereas, as Du
Bois and many other subsequent historians have amply demonstrated (and as I
hope this week’s posts have also highlighted), it would be far more accurate to
argue that Congressional Reconstruction succeeded on many levels despite the
opposition of both Johhnson and Southern white supremacists. The Civil Rights
Act of 1866 offers a telling moment and example of such successes.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Reconstruction histories you’d highlight?
I just wanted to say that I am an African American man - that I will be 50 years old this year - and I've concluded that everybody brings a different perspective to the table. For example: I've had lots of whites I consider friends who have no problem with me being African American, but I met one white man this year (first time for me) who explains that wishes he wasn't white - who is ashamed of the way so many whites have treated minorities in our culture. Interesting view, wouldn't you say? ...Roland Gibson, Jr.
ReplyDelete