By
Sarah C. Scott, USCHS Intern

Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm (D) NY 1968-1983
- Library of Congress
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The
Capitol Hill newspaper,
Roll Call, recently
ran an article comparing the 57th Congress, the first
Congress of the twentieth century, with the last of
this century, the recently seated 106th Congress.
Roll
Call noted that one of the most striking contrasts
between these two bodies is the inclusion of African
Americans in the 106th Congress. From the end of the
Civil War to the beginning of the twentieth century,
only twenty-two African Americans were elected to Congress.
After Republican George Henry White of North Carolina
left the House of Representatives in 1901, no African
American was elected to Congress until Oscar De Priest
(R-IL) in 1928. Of the four hundred and thirty-five
House members in the current Congress, there are thirty-eight
African American members. Beyond a few short articles
and an even smaller number of books written on this
subject, the history of these men and women has been
woefully neglected by historians.
In
Outstanding
African Americans of Congress, author Dr. Shirley
Washington highlights fifteen notable African Americans
who have served in Congress, including Shirley Chisholm,
Mickey Leland and Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. The subjects
were chosen by polling a distinguished advisory board
of scholars and current and former Members of Congress.
Beginning this chronicle with the post-Civil War
election of the first African American Member, Dr.
Washington notes that until the twentieth century,
African American Congressmen had a number of characteristics
in common: "almost all were born and raised in slavery
in the Southern states that made up the Confederacy;
they were committed to ending slavery even if it
meant taking up arms; they were brave men with strong
family values, dedicated to educating themselves,
their children and other slaves; and they were inherently
sympathetic to the North and to the Republican Party
of Abraham Lincoln."
Early
African American Members of Congress also had a difficult
time holding office. Some states employed tactics to
discredit African American officeholders, discourage
office seekers and disfranchise African American voters.
In the late 1890's and early 1900's, a series of "black
codes" effectively disenfranchised African Americans
in the South. The codes were supplemented by so-called "Jim
Crow" laws limiting their freedom to own or lease property
and to move about as they pleased. Even some Northern
states employed practices to deny voting rights to
blacks. It was not until the 1920s, when large numbers
of African Americans migrated to Northern cities, that
this group had a foundation for political organization.
This centralization of power as a voting bloc in Northern
cities led to an increase in black representation in
the federal government.
1883 poster of African-American leaders
- Library of Congress
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Referring
to the segregated restaurants, hotels, and public transportation
in Washington, D.C. in the 1930s, one former Congressman
said that holding federal office did not mean exemption
from Jim Crow laws. Several decades later, the Civil
Rights Movement and the enforcement of the Voting Rights
Act of 1965 served as catalysts for the election of
African Americans to Congress. The end of legalized
segregation allowed African Americans to increase their
numbers in Congress.
It
also was during this time that African American Members
of Congress established an organization to represent
and enhance the combined interest of African Americans.
They founded the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) in
1971 to eliminate the lingering barriers to equal justice
and equal opportunity. The CBC's motto: "Black people
have no permanent friends, no permanent enemies, just
permanent interests," signifies the unity of purpose
that underlies its political influence. These interests
include special concern for the protection of civil
rights and the guarantee of equal opportunity in education,
employment and housing. Members of CBC include the
well-known civil rights activist Congressman John Lewis
(D-GA) and Jesse Jackson, Jr. (D-IL), the son of the
famous minister and politician. One of the most influential
of the current African American members of Congress
is the newly appointed Republican Congress Chairman,
J.C. Watts, Jr., of Oklahoma. The only African American
Republican in Congress, Watts was first elected to
the U.S. House of Representatives in November 1994.
Though he is best known as the star quarterback for
the University of Oklahoma, Watts has now made his
name known on the Hill through his leadership on issues
such as the Community Renewal Project.
Though
political participation for African Americans was delayed,
significant progress has been made this century. Dr.
Washington's
Outstanding African American Members
of Congress further explores this history. The
biographies of these men and women tell remarkable
stories of their strength and will to extend the promises
of the Founding Fathers to every citizen of the United
States.
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Outstanding African Americans of
Congress is the third in the Outstanding Members
of Congress Series begun by the U.S. Capitol Historical
Society in 1995 with the publication of Outstanding
Women Members of Congress and continued in
1997 with the publication of Outstanding Athletes
of Congress.
Click
here to order the book from the USCHS Online Gift
Shop |
Further Reading:
William
L. Clay, Just Permanent Interests: Black Americans
in Congress, 1870-1991, (1992).
Congressional
Black Caucus Web Site
Bruce
A. Ragsdale, Black Americans in Congress, 1870
- 1989, (1990).
Mark
R. Salser, editor, Black Americans in Congress, (1991).