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| This page contains background information on Arkansas Black History and on The Practice of Law. | Arkansas Black History African-American attorneys have played a significant role in Arkansas history since the end of the Civil War. Some were active in politics and civil rights and became quite prominent. Others toiled quietly on the more mundane legal affairs of clients. Between 1865 and 1950 almost 100 Black men were admitted to practice law in Arkansas. Between 1860 and 1950, the African-American population of Arkansas averaged about 25 percent of the states total population. The percentage decreased after 1920. In 1950, African-Americans made up only 22 percent of the states population.The majority of this population was concentrated in the larger cities of Little Rock, Pine Bluff, Fort Smith, and Hot Springs, and in several counties comprising the Black Belt Chicot, Crittenden, Desha, Jefferson, and Phillips. During the Reconstruction period following the Civil War (1865-1891), Arkansas was considered a land of opportunity by many African-Americans. Reports of the day indicate that joint use of public facilities was common before 1891, at least in Little Rock. Most African-Americans who voted had joined the Republican Party, a tribute to Abraham Lincoln. The Republican Party controlled state politics after the Civil War and until 1874. Power switched hands after 1874, when the Democratic Party, largely made up of former Confederates who were re-enfranchised by the 1874 Arkansas Constitutional Convention, won most state offices. Between 1865 and 1874, Arkansas had not instituted black code laws restricting the rights of African-Americans, as had other Southern states. Even after 1874, when Southern Democrats regained legislative and gubernatorial control, the situation did not change immediately. For another 20 years, Democrats and Republicans shared power and split county offices on the ballot. This fusion system, as it was called, resulted in some African-Americans serving in various state offices until 1892, although loss of power led some county Republican organizations to militate for and ultimately exclude African-Americans from membership. The 1890 elections saw political control pass completely to the Democratic Party, which maintained that control until the latter half of the 20th Century. Even after 1890, however, Republicans in federal office granted some appointments to African-Americans throughout a period of legally-enforced segregation. After 1890, with little resistance from most whites, the Democrats began to pass anti-African-American legislation. The first, a separate car bill segregating railway coaches, was enacted in 1891, despite the passionate opposition of the few African-Americans in the Arkansas legislature. A second step was the revision of election laws, ostensibly to prevent the election fraud that had been rampant since the Civil War. Many African-Americans voted for the change. The effect of these laws, which required an ability to read, was to disfranchise many African-Americans and poor whites. A constitutional amendment establishing a poll tax was passed in 1892. In 1903, a law segregating the states urban streetcar systems was passed. By 1894, African-Americans had been completely eliminated from state political office except for a few minor posts. Between 1898 and 1906, the Democratic Party created a primary system for selecting candidates at local and state levels. At the same time, it began formally excluding African-Americans from party membership. Given the one-party nature of Arkansas politics by this time, the decision effectively disfranchised even more African-Americans. Between 1892 and 1902, the average voter turnout of African-Americans in Arkansas dropped by 75 percent, from 23,026 to 5,632. With the white primary, the Democratic Party seemed to have done all it could with the law. Some segregation had existed even before the Democrats took power, when African-Americans themselves had created their own segregated churches soon after emancipation. State-supported schools were segregated under the 1868 Constitution. These, together with the new laws and exclusion from politics, made segregation the rule in Arkansas. At the same time these laws were being enacted, physical violence against African-Americans was ever-present. Between 1882 and 1951, 226 lynchings took place in Arkansas. Other examples include: in 1898, violent efforts to banish African-Americans from the town of Lonoke; in 1903, the murder of 13 African-Americans, and not a single white in St. Charles; about the same time, the evacuation of African-Americans by white citizens from the town of Harrison. The Elaine riot of 1919 involved the death of five whites and an uncountable number of African-Americans. In 1927, a lynched man was publicly burned on West Ninth Street in Little Rock before a huge crowd of whites. Despite the effect of the violence and legal restrictions, African-American churches and schools provided a foundation that allowed the African-American community to develop in many respects, giving its leaders the skills and opportunity to present its case and prevent many of the more onerous laws that appeared in other southern states. In addition, an African-American middle-class slowly was becoming established. The practice of law was a boom industry after 1865. Nationally, the number of lawyers almost tripled between 1850 and 1870, from 23,939 to 64,137. Law was seen as a way for smart, ambitious men of all races and status to get ahead in life. |
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Copyright ©2003 Judith Kilpatrick, all rights reserved